1 / 17

BUNI (Bluetooth Universal Navigation Interface)

BUNI (Bluetooth Universal Navigation Interface). Design Team : Ben Doherty (Manager) Jeremy Gummeson Chris Campetti Phil Murray. Faculty Advisor : Lixin Gao. What is BUNI?. BUNI is the B luetooth U niversal N avigation I nterface

penny
Download Presentation

BUNI (Bluetooth Universal Navigation Interface)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BUNI(Bluetooth Universal Navigation Interface) Design Team: Ben Doherty (Manager) Jeremy Gummeson Chris Campetti Phil Murray Faculty Advisor: Lixin Gao

  2. What is BUNI? • BUNI is the Bluetooth Universal Navigation Interface • A system intended to bring 2-dimensional navigation to a wide array of devices • RC Cars, Boats, Tanks, Vacuum Cleaners, Etc.

  3. Why BUNI? • Bluetooth is an emerging wireless standard • No generic protocol exists for 2-dimensional navigation • Interoperability: Many types of devices can operate many types of vehicles

  4. Implementations • Programmable lawnmowers, vacuum cleaners • Rescue vehicles • Surveillance • Mine sweepers

  5. Why Java? • Write once, run everywhere • J2ME for portable devices • Enables cell phones, PDA’s, and other portable devices to run the same code • Simple Bluetooth API (JSR-82)

  6. Why Bluetooth? • Emerging Wireless Standard • Low-power, reliable • Enables link transparency (By emulating serial ports) • Inexpensive hardware

  7. System Overview

  8. Curve Fitting • By nature, vehicles will not be able to follow arbitrary curves: • Angle might exceed vehicle capabilities • Steering control might only allow discrete angles • To compensate, curve input must be modified to fit vehicle parameters • Meet maximum turning angle • Use only allowed angles

  9. Curve Fitting Continued • A few examples of level 0 (point-to-point) curve fitting using bezier curves • Bezier curves use start and end points, as well as 2 “control points” to direct the curve • Still a very preliminary algorithm Legend: Black – Original Curve Input Blue / Red points – Control points Red Line – Guiding triangle Orange – Fitted Curve

  10. Communications Protocol • Communication between vehicle and Bluetooth device over Bluetooth serial emulation • Simple byte-based protocol • Client/Server model: Portable Bluetooth device as client, vehicle as server

  11. Vehicle Program • Vehicle controlled by a RabbitCORE 3100 Microcontroller with eb506 Bluetooth Module • Written with Dynamic C language

  12. Program Flow on Vehicle

  13. Portable Device Program • 6 Major Steps • Connect to vehicle and authorize • Receive vehicle parameters • Receive curve input from user (via stylus) • Fit curve to vehicle parameters • Encode fitted curve to command data • Send move command

  14. PD Program Possibilities • Multiple queued paths • Terminate current path (stop) • Scalable map sizes • Multiple vehicle control • Speed control

  15. Deliverables for MDR • Java Program with stylus input and basic curve fitting (Point A to point B) • RC Car with microcontroller • Working movement from point A to point B

  16. In the future… possibilities • Stored, bookmarked paths • Environment maps • Environmental feedback, i.e. obstacles, relative position, terrain

  17. Any questions?

More Related