AdaPilot – Open Source Safety Critical Autopilot Project

AdaPilot is developed by a team of volunteers who listen closely to their user comunity. Together with our users and supporters we strive to make state of the art control software for remotely piloted vehicles that is safety critical, powerful and flexible but also easy to integrate.

The AdaPilot website is dedicated to serving the Free Software, Open-Source, AdaPilot Community. Here you can link and download the source code, tools and libraries for the AdaPilot development environment and get the latest AdaPilot news, resources and training materials. It?s also the place to exchange, ideas, discuss and contribute with a large community of AdaPilot programmers. This website is a work in progress and may thus be incomplete and in continuous development through the adding of new updates and informations, it is a “live website”.

Do you have intention to participate and contribute in the project? Check http://adapilot.likeabird.eu/

Share the article:
Show your
Maker soul!
Buy a T-Shirt
Coffee for Chiptron
Give a boost to the next article

Related Articles

Aeris-10

When radar is mentioned, most people picture a metal dish on an airport roof or a giant military installation surrounded by barbed wire. The AERIS-10 project (short for Array Electronic Radar with Integrated System) is embarking on the development of…

Notice by administrator: A few STM32 development boards (e.g. STM32L4 and IoT development board, STM32F723 and STMod+ connector) as well as Microchip development boards contain also PMOD connector List of Microchip Development boards with PMOD connector (selected) DM240001-2, DM160228, DM240001-3…

EasyEDA. It is a free web-based tool for schematic capture, PCB layout, and circuit simulation. The best part of any cloud- or web-based development tool is that it runs on a remote server (no worries to install on local machines),…

Dozens of miniature FPV drones have decimated Russia’s strategic aviation – you’ve probably all read about it. But do you know what hardware was in those FPV drones? The Orange Pi Zero 2W found its use in these drones.

In recent days, the more observant part of the DIY and developer community may have noticed that something is happening around the popular Teensy development boards. Two well-known companies – Adafruit Industries and SparkFun Electronics – have ended their collaboration,…

Drones are now a common part of our lives — from filming weddings and advertisements to racing and monitoring industrial and critical infrastructure. However, they are not always welcome “visitors,” making drone detection a crucial priority. A life-saving priority. This…

Trends