
MeshNetics - 802.15.4 / ZigBee Wireless RF Modules MeshNetics is a creator of easy-to-integrate 802.15.4 / ZigBee wireless RF modules and ZigBee PRO-certified mesh networking software, used by OEMs and system integrators to add wireless connectivity to their products and solutions.
MeshNetics RF modules feature industry-leading range performance, long battery life and ultra-small footprint.
They are designed for use in 868/915 MHz and 2.4 GHz frequency bands.
MeshNetics is a single source of ZigBee modules, development tools, networking software, technical support, and design services.

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repository
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comp.lang.forth.repository
The purpose of this site is to document existing Forth usage that for some reasons cannot become a part of the ANSI/ISO Forth Standard.
The contents of this site need not pass the standardization procedure with its advantages and disadvantages.
OTOH, there is a requirement that the proposals may be published here only after they are discussed in the comp.lang.forth newsgroup.
preview:
http://forth.sourceforge.net
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book
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Forth Application Techniques
The Forth programming language was designed specially for embedded systems and other applications where compact size, excellent performance, and good access to external hardware is important.
Its most famous users include Federal Express, NASA, and many manufacturers of 'computer-controlled widgets.' The best introduction to the Forth language for beginners, this book is based on course notes used by thousands of beginning Forth...
preview:
http://www.amazon.com
date: 6/1/2006
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misc.
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Forth programming language
Forth is a computer programming environment.
It was initially developed by Chuck Moore at the US National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) during the 1960s, formalized as a programming language in 1977, and standardized by ANSI in 1994.
It features both interactive execution of commands (making it suitable as a shell for systems that lack a more formal operating system) . . .
preview:
http://en.wikipedia.org
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portal
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Forthfreak - Wiki
This wiki supports the ForthCommunities by offering a platform for information, knowledge, and code exchange.
Please feel free to share your knowledge by adding to the wiki.
Thank you. During migration to the new server, the old wiki remains available.
Please update pages on the new (this) wiki.
preview:
http://wiki.forthfreak.net
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article
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Moving Forth: a series on writing Forth kernels
This series originally appeared in The Computer Journal.
Accompanying source code can be found on the CamelForth page.
Part 1: Design Decisions in the Forth Kernel (33K text, 21K images) Part 2: Benchmarks and Case Studies of Forth Kernels (31K text) Part 3: Demystifying DOES> (48K text, 45K images) Part 4: Assemble or Metacompile? (8K text) Part 5: The Z80 Primitives (9K text, 38K linked files) Part 6: The Z80 High-level Kernel...
preview:
http://www.zetetics.com
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vendor
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Ultratechnology - Former Business Site
UltraTechnology has been out of business since 2002.
This site documents its history with videos and essays and a new ongoing blog.
UltraTechnology was formed by Jeff Fox in Berkeley, California in 1990 to develop a custom computer.
In order to best understand the work done at UltraTechnology, and the design work done for UltraTechnology by Charles Moore, the inventor of the Forth programming language, I believe that one needs to understand...
preview:
http://www.ultratechnology.com
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