beaglebone lcd display quotation

NHD-7.0CTP-CAPE-N | BeagleBone Black Cape with TFT Display | 7.0" Sunlight Readable LCD | Capacitive Touchscreen | EEPROM with On-Board Dip Switches | Developing with Android & Linux

Engineered in Elgin IL USA, we designed this BeagleBone Cape to be a perfect fit for our 7.0” TFT displays and upgraded it with the sunlight readable NHD-7.0-800480EF-ASXN#-CTP display model. With capacitive 5-point multi-touch functionality and 800x480 resolution screen, this cape works seamlessly while developing with operating systems like Android and Linux. It includes an on-board dip switch for configuring EEPROM and secondary headers for additional cape connections. In addition to the secondary cape slot, we added four 3.5mm mounting holes that are compatible with standard M3 screws, a reset button, write protection pins, PWM backlight control, and an LED power indicator. With this cape we’ve made it easy to take your design process from concept to reality. When paired with the BeagleBone Black board (sold separately by beagleboard.org) you’ll have everything you need to plug-in and start developing.

Choose from a wide selection of interface options or talk to our experts to select the best one for your project. We can incorporate HDMI, USB, SPI, VGA and more into your display to achieve your design goals.

Equip your display with a custom cut cover glass to improve durability. Choose from a variety of cover glass thicknesses and get optical bonding to protect against moisture and debris.

beaglebone lcd display quotation

This 7" touchscreen cape creates a fully integrated system when combined with your BeagleBone Black. Provides full Angstrom support for easy BeagleBone prototyping and projects. A secondary set of header pins gives built-in stacking cape-ability.

beaglebone lcd display quotation

Utilizing pre-existing Linux drivers, this 800 x 480 touchscreen cape will help you hit the ground running. Front-facing mechanical buttons and capacitive touch function give the user full control over the BeagleBone Black. Supports Angstrom, Android 4.2, Windows CE7, TI linux and Debian (default).

beaglebone lcd display quotation

The Cape for 7 inch displays is neat interface to connect the Waveshare 7 inch displays to your Beaglebone Black. We have not tested any other LCD"s, but the interface is designed for 7 inch resistive touchscreen LCD displays

beaglebone lcd display quotation

Awesome videos and very informational and helpful. I was on the raspberry pi, but i just got my beaglebone black yesterday. I was curious about a few things.

2.) out of the box, is I2C enabled? i have some project i want to port over to the BBB that is currently running on my pi (support for a 128×64 LCD display)

If you prefer Ubuntu, you can download Ubuntu from various sites, or get a pre-installed and configured micro SD Flash with Ubuntu 13.04 for the BeagleBone Black from:

Hi, if you are sure that the IP address is correct (e.g., 192.168.7.2) and the BeagleBone is not appearing as a USB device on your PC, then you should flash it again with a freshly downloaded image — it’s likely that the image on the eMMC is corrupt. Derek.

I have an application built with IAR that I am running from SD Card on the BeagleBone “White” board. I boot my application using an MLO file from the TI Starterware and create an “app” file to load which both live on the SD Card. As you know this setup will copy the application into RAM on the BB White and begin execution at 0x80000000. I use the tiimage utility to convert the IAR binary into an MLO loadable app file.

As of a couple months ago I started working with BeagleBone Black for a work project. Recently, I’ve written a bash script that is supposed to install the software I’ve written. Sometimes (not every time) after running echo -en ‘\n\niface eth0 inet dhcp\n’ >> /etc/network/interfaces; /etc/init.d/networking restart the board will stop responding…which doesn’t make sense. Other times it goes through the entire script without issue, and after a reboot it will no longer respond….but sometimes it appears to work just fine.

I’ve followed instructions from many different websites, but I can’t seem to get the BealgeBone Black (Rev B6) to load an image off the SD card. I’ve tried FAT16/FAT32 formatting on the 16GB SD card, used the latest Debian image from beaglebone website, and other combinations of stuff, trying to figure out how to get it to work. Sometimes when I hold the s2 / boot button, D4 will stay lit for most of the time, instead of D3…other times it’s reversed. Sometimes when trying, after waiting 30 mins, it appears to be finished by lighting up D3 and D4 solid, and no flash from the other 2.

I am trying to install ubuntu in beaglebone but ubuntu desktop environment wont’s came.Now i am trying to restore angstrom to eMMC on Beaglebone Black. I searched all things related to this but nothing found .please hlp me .

Frank, if you don’t need anything on the beaglebone then you should be able to reflash it using the usual steps. The alternative is to boot the BBB from a SD card (not flashing image) and then mount the FAT partition of the eMMC as a device. You can then edit the uEnv.txt file using an editor like nano. Hope that helps, Derek.

Derek, thanks a lot. I will try it. My objective is to stop booting at uboot. So that I can setup nfs and tftpboot. Since I messed up uEnv.txt Do you think I have to reflash it first? I was thinking it should at least try to boot and stop on uboot but not load kernel. That is why I modified uEnv.txt in first place. I am new to Beaglebone it is different than OMAP 3530.

Please help me because i want to restore angstrom os in eMMC in Beaglebone black. I was formatted my beaglebone because i want to restore anstrong os . When i am connecting beaglebone with my system then nothing is shown .I am not getting any solution how my beaglebone is working.plz Derek help me . ..plz

I did a procedure with beagleboneblack-save-emmc, but after a long time (with press the boot switch S2), nothing happen, the leds are OFF. no blink or anything.

I solved that problem. I downloaded emmc flasher from here http://elinux.org/Beagleboard:BeagleBoneBlack_Debian#BBB_Rev_C_.284GB_eMMC.29. After that everything went as you stated. Thanks.

I hope this was not already posted, but I thought it was worth mentioning. The LED flashing sequence I saw when updating my eMMC was a back-and-forth (cylon eyes, KITT) pattern, and D5 did not stay on at all. My little HDMI display showed activity during the process before going all white, not sure why. When the process was done, all 4 of the LEDs when on, but they did not stay on longer than maybe a minute or two before all going dark. ?? The flashing worked though.

Hi there — try again, but make sure that if you have a REV-B BeagleBone that you use the 2GB flasher image, not the more common 4GB flasher image. Kind regards, Derek.

I have a BeagleBone and I did write an Angstrom image on provided sd card. Later when I connect it to my PC it’s not getting detected. The led’s are not glowing. Please help me. What should I do??

I believe I’m being a little rude in the above, but I’ve been scouring hundreds of articles for weeks now, all I want to do is update to the latest jessie images. Despite following vaguely written articles that point every which way to more vague articles, nothing works the way it’s should. If the BeagleBone was upfront and said “Hey, this is a really small project and is intended for people very familiar with a Linux Operating System” then I wouldn’t be as upset.

However that’s not the case. The BeagleBone was supposed to be “as easy as Pi” referencing the more widely supported Raspberry Pi project of which I am more familiar (but still nowhere near expert).

Exploring BeagleBone came yesterday and I found the info on page 90. Somehow I missed that on the on-line copy. I do better looking a a book than a monitor.

I have flashed the 3.8.13 bone79 on my BBB but now my 4D Systems 4DCAPE won’t show the IDE but does show a cursor arrow. Do you how I might get the display showing the IDE again? It did show the IDE before i upgraded to 79. I wanted to do the upgrade in hopes that I could get the BBIO ADC to work.

2) Then I booted up that version of Debian and logged on as root (w/o SD card in BBB). From here you can change the /boot/uENV.txt file as stated by: http://elinux.org/Beagleboard:BeagleBoneBlack_Debian#BBB_Rev_C_.284GB_eMMC.29.

Secondly, do you know of a definitive tutorial for QNX on Beaglebone? I’m thinking of using it for my final year project and really need a good introductory tutorial.

I am working on beaglebone where i have to log real time data which requires me to log the terminal output onto the SD Card of Beaglebone. When i plug in the Beaglebone, it doesn’t display the external storage. I have tried mounting it but in vain. I have created a log file in Cloud9 IDE. How do i export it to the external storage ?

I am trying to flash my beaglebone black board with a kernel that I build by following : “https://eewiki.net/display/linuxonarm/BeagleBone+Black#BeagleBoneBlack-SetupmicroSDcard”. As I try to flash the board it seems to be writing the eMMC and says to restart the board after the process is finished. I remove the card and restart it, them after a while it shows the following message and does nothing.

I use BeagleBone black REVC with 4Gb eMMC memory. I followed above steps, and I wait over 1 hour, just USR0 LED and USR2 led still blink. USR0 led blink in beathearth pattern. I use USB as power supply. I can’t figure out what’s problem?

beaglebone lcd display quotation

The key enhancement here is the $39 price, which is $11 less than the lowest current BeagleBone Black price at Element14. More typically, the BeagleBone Black sells for $55 to $60. The lower cost is primarily due to the removal of the micro-HDMI port, which was one of the key additions to the Black version compared to the original BeagleBone when it launched in 2013.

While it seemed necessary at the time to keep up with the HDMI-equipped Raspberry Pi, as it turns out, few BeagleBone Black users actually use the port, according to a Hackaday hands-on story that alerted us to the Green’s readiness for shipment. Hackaday quotes Beagleboard.org co-founder Jason Kridner — which indicates the strong support for the Green from the project — as saying that “nobody used” the port, instead preferring to hook up a display cape via the SBC’s LCD connector.

As Hackaday’s Brian Benchoff puts it: “If you want a media server, you get a Raspberry Pi, and if you want a tiny Linux box to toggle pins very quickly, you get a BeagleBone.”

While they were messing with the power-connector end of the board, the BeagleBone Green’s designers also opted to switch the bottom-mounted USB port from a mini-USB connector (“USB0”) to a more up-to-date micro-USB one, making it usable with today’s most common charging cables. As on the BeagleBone Black, the Green’s micro-USB port is used for both DC power input and host PC connection. Both USB ports are described as USB 2.0 compatible in the System Reference Guide.

Other features borrowed from the BeagleBone Black include 512MB of DDR3 RAM, 4GB of eMMC flash, and a microSD slot. As with the Black, there’s no onboard WiFi, but you get a Fast Ethernet port. (For more details on the BeagleBone Black, see our initial BeagleBone Black coverage.)

The BeagleBone Green supports the BeagleBone’s large ecosystem of add-on Capes, which pales in comparison only to the Raspberry Pi’s add-on universe. Seed itself sells Capes including a 4DCAPE-43 4.3-inch LCD display with seven pushbuttons.

The BeagleBone Green is not the first BeagleBone clone to be announced, but it’s the first to ship. CircuitCo’s OEM-focused BlueSteel-Basic, which like the Green, removed the HDMI port, never reached market. A BeagleCore COM version of the BeagleBone only has two more days on Kickstarter to miraculously raise about $50,000 more than its current $6K plus of funding.

The BeagleBone Green SBC will soon be available for $39. According to an email to LinuxGizmos, Seeed will begin accepting orders for the board on the BeagleBone Green product page of its website around — or slightly before — Aug. 20.