[TriLUG] The eagle has landed! #NSC01 is home
Francois Dion via TriLUG
trilug at trilug.org
Wed Apr 22 08:25:12 EDT 2015
And so is the cluster (networked) of 7 Raspberry Pi and 8 cameras. AFAIK,
this is the first multi node computing cluster ever sent to near space on a
High Altitude Balloon flight. We like "First in Flight" in North Carolina :)
Cluster detail:
http://raspberry-python.blogspot.com/2015/04/the-computer-network-in-space-part-1.html
Preliminary information:
Launch 7:55 from Raylen Vineyard, in Mocksville, West of Winston Salem
Official everything off the ground, we are not holding the balloon
anymore:7:57:24
Balloon burst: 9:05:57
Ballon back on earth: 9:39 in Hurdle Mills, North of Chapel Hill
Lost visual contact soon after takeoff, and primary and backup positioning
systems failed to report during the flight... They were working perfectly
just before we let the balloon go.
However, we got a ping from the balloon at 16:48:58! And thus, we were able
to recover it.
A full debrief will happen at our next PYPTUG meeting this coming Monday
the 27th in Winston-Salem. We'll talk some about the python code that ran
the cluster, the realtime twitter position reporting, the simulation
website, look at pretty pictures etc (picture of earth right after the
balloon burst):
http://www.pyptug.org/2015/04/pyptug-monthly-meeting-team-near-space.html
I'll also be at RENCI (Renaissance Computing Institute) on Thursday the
23rd (TOMORROW!) talking about Python 3 (Mystery Python Theater 3K) in
Chapell Hill. Feel free to attend and ask questions (the NSC-01 mission was
powered by Linux and most of the code was Python 3). See the details of
that meeting there:
http://trizpug.org/Members/cbc/apr-15-mtg
Francois
--
raspberry-python.blogspot.com - www.pyptug.org - www.3DFutureTech.info -
@f_dion
More information about the TriLUG
mailing list