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Product typeBook
Published inApr 2015
Publisher
ISBN-139781784393618
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Rushi Gajjar
Rushi Gajjar
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Rushi Gajjar

Rushi Gajjar is an entrepreneur, embedded systems hardware developer and a lifetime electronics enthusiast. He works in the field of research and development of high-speed single-board embedded computers and wireless sensor nodes for the Internet of Things. Prior to that, his extensive work as a freelancer in the domain of electronics hardware design introduced him to rapid prototyping development boards and single board embedded computers such as the Raspberry Pi. In the spare time, he loves to develop the projects on Raspberry Pi including sensors, imaging, data logging, web-servers, and machine learning automation systems. He authored a DIY and hardware based book titled Raspberry Pi Sensors which takes deep dive in developing sensor interfacing based projects with Raspberry Pi. His vision encompasses connecting every entity in world to the Internet for enhancing the human living experience. https://www.linkedin.com/in/rushigajjarhttp://www.amazon.com/Raspberry-Pi-Sensors-Rushi-Gajjar/dp/1784393614/ref=sr_1_9?ie=UTF8&qid=1453884207&sr=8-9&keywords=raspberry+Pi+Sensorshttp://rushigajjar.blogspot.in/
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Synchronizing the clock with the Internet


It is really difficult when the date and time of the RasPi are not synced with the local time zone while logging the data. It is much more difficult once you set up your logging device or sensor node in a remote place that doesn't have uninterrupted power supply. You might have noticed that whenever the RasPi boots up, the clock shows the incorrect time. Check it yourself by entering the date command in the command-line interface of the RasPi. Also, in the previous chapter, you might have noticed that the time logged in the .csv log file is not showing the refreshed date. No, the RasPi doesn't time-travel when it's sleeping! It's just because it doesn't have a dedicated button cell to power its real-time clock (RTC). To make the RasPi cheaper, the designers removed a lot of functionalities that normal desktops or laptops have.

A desktop computer has an inbuilt button cell to power the internal RTC. To achieve this with the RasPi, you can interface...

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Raspberry Pi Sensors
Published in: Apr 2015Publisher: ISBN-13: 9781784393618

Author (1)

author image
Rushi Gajjar

Rushi Gajjar is an entrepreneur, embedded systems hardware developer and a lifetime electronics enthusiast. He works in the field of research and development of high-speed single-board embedded computers and wireless sensor nodes for the Internet of Things. Prior to that, his extensive work as a freelancer in the domain of electronics hardware design introduced him to rapid prototyping development boards and single board embedded computers such as the Raspberry Pi. In the spare time, he loves to develop the projects on Raspberry Pi including sensors, imaging, data logging, web-servers, and machine learning automation systems. He authored a DIY and hardware based book titled Raspberry Pi Sensors which takes deep dive in developing sensor interfacing based projects with Raspberry Pi. His vision encompasses connecting every entity in world to the Internet for enhancing the human living experience. https://www.linkedin.com/in/rushigajjarhttp://www.amazon.com/Raspberry-Pi-Sensors-Rushi-Gajjar/dp/1784393614/ref=sr_1_9?ie=UTF8&qid=1453884207&sr=8-9&keywords=raspberry+Pi+Sensorshttp://rushigajjar.blogspot.in/
Read more about Rushi Gajjar