LAVA 1.0 Content Posted August 25, 2005 Report Share Posted August 25, 2005 Hi Everybody... I use LabView for many applications. And whatever our clients need. I may attempt writing a video game for fun... JLV Quote Link to comment
Yair Posted August 25, 2005 Report Share Posted August 25, 2005 Hi Everybody...I use LabView for many applications. And whatever our clients need. I may attempt writing a video game for fun... JLV 5835[/snapback] Hi Joel, welcome to the LAVA forums. I think you will find out if you put some time into the LAVA forums as well you will find it even harder to reach 1000 replies. Plus there are no s here. I use LV for various control applications, also in agricultural and semi-industrial applications (like growing fish or sorting corn), while providing advanced communication (wi-fi, ethernet) and various interfaces (PDAs, cell phones)... Ditto for the games comments. Quote Link to comment
Khalid Posted August 25, 2005 Report Share Posted August 25, 2005 Hi Everybody...I use LabView for many applications. And whatever our clients need. I may attempt writing a video game for fun... JLV 5835[/snapback] Ditto here .. including the games for fun -Khalid Quote Link to comment
peteski Posted September 8, 2005 Report Share Posted September 8, 2005 Hello Folks! Seems a quiescent enough spot for my first post to this forum. I first started using Labview in 1991, at my first job out of grad school working at Texaco's Beacon, NY research facility. I used it for a variety of data acquisition and data analysis tasks throughout my 8 years of doing combustion and engine research there. In 1999 I found a job as a contract engineer at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, helping to setup the ground test equipment for the GLAS instrument on ICESat. After ICESat launched in Jan 2003, I switched contracting companies to work for Sigma Space Corporation, but still do most of my work at NASA GSFC for the Laboratory of Laser Remote Sensing. I do a variety of quick and dirty R&D Lab setups, and some (almost sophisticated) analysis of engineering data from the GLAS orbital telemetry. My latest projects are setup of the ground test equipment for the LOLA (Lunar Orbital Laser Altimeter) instrument on LRO (Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter), and some (very) basic pseudo-random code laser altimetry modelling. -Pete Liiva Quote Link to comment
JPrevost Posted January 8, 2006 Author Report Share Posted January 8, 2006 I'm using LabView to design a full fledged automotive EFI datalogger/autotune program. When I say full fledged I'm talking real-time emulation hardware support, graphing, extra a/d inputs for datalogging accelerometers and special sensors like thermocouples for EGT's and wideband o2 sensors for accurate AFR measurements all synced to the GM computers ram dumped 17Hz . It's freakn' awesome. I'll be posting pictures in another thread somewhere on this forum! I tried Visual Basic but gave up when it's serial communications wasn't giving me good control. Dealing with async streamed data isn't easy. Quote Link to comment
Grampa_of_Oliva_n_Eden Posted February 20, 2006 Report Share Posted February 20, 2006 Yen wrote " . Plus there are no s here. " I did notice there was something missing. Although I have industrial and R&D customers, I use LV to help make smarter bombs and bullets. Ben Quote Link to comment
Perez Posted February 21, 2006 Report Share Posted February 21, 2006 From Russia with love But currently I am in Seoul, South Korea Previously I spent over 5 years doing ATE (Automated Test Equipment) for one manufacturing company from Finland. (Sounds a bit geographically complicated: Russian from Seoul worked in Finland ) Quote Link to comment
crelf Posted February 21, 2006 Report Share Posted February 21, 2006 send messages with fake sender address / emulate my presence / blocked channels (XXX) so your LabVIEW work is mostly as a hacker... Quote Link to comment
Perez Posted February 22, 2006 Report Share Posted February 22, 2006 so your LabVIEW work is mostly as a hacker... Basically not, but sometimes it happens I do not use my hack skills to get profit - I use it mostly to knead my brains. Once I hack DSP software with Labview. We outsourced DSP programming to another company, than when we received DSP it works with minor bugs. We asked them to correct these bugs but they work too slow, therefore I was forced to read SW from DSP (it was locked for reading ) and correct it by myself. So you can see Quote Link to comment
kkabir Posted February 27, 2006 Report Share Posted February 27, 2006 I have been using Labview for about 2 years. I develop and deploy Labview programs to characterize custom CMOS linear imager devices that include first silicon( probe on wafer) and packaged devices. I was using for a long(a l-o-n-g) time HTB(formerly HP Rocky Mountain Basic) for similar work via GPIB, RS232. But it was slow(both S/W and H/W it supported). I converted to NI PXI & MXI H/W and Labview, and now the same packaged device that took 14 minutes to fully characterize now takes about 35 seconds! I have recently moved to Labview 8.0 and my old code works. I only had to modify code for file I/O since some related vi's were no longer supported. After that, my code works fine. I have about 250 or so vi's loaded(most are my vi's). I like the event structure with dynamic enabling of controls. Pardon me for a long post. Khan Xerox Rochester, NY Quote Link to comment
trosier Posted March 15, 2006 Report Share Posted March 15, 2006 I have been using Labview now for about 2 years. I work for a satellite communications company and develop test fixtures that test out our modem's firmware. This is mostly done using serial, ethernet, USB, and GPIB communications. I have really enjoyed what I have learned so far and I am looking forward to more. I take my Labview Intermediate I&II courses in April and probably a Test Stand course thereafter. I look forward to all of the training I can get as well as experience obviously. I came across LAVA by chance after not getting the anwers I needed from the NI forum. I did a Google search and there it was. I think it is pretty cool. Quote Link to comment
James P. Martin Posted April 18, 2006 Report Share Posted April 18, 2006 Hi to all LabVIEW users... I used LabVIEW in our college, coz it is in our curriculum and since then I loved it.......now I am doing several projects using LabVIEW in my college for various data acquisition measurements , and also as in various courses like ....DSP etc. Quote Link to comment
graastein Posted September 19, 2006 Report Share Posted September 19, 2006 Hey guys, We are using LabVIEW at out College to control a RV-M1 robot. The original controlsystem got broken, and we got the tast to build it up from scratch using LabVIEW. Also using cFielPoint and PDA on the project. Very interesting Quote Link to comment
thols Posted September 29, 2006 Report Share Posted September 29, 2006 I use it mostly for developing ATEs and verification tests for our point-to-point microwave radio systems. So its RF, Microwave, Spectrum analyzers, signal generators, power meters, network analyzers and other hardware, controlling the DUTs, analyzing data, and much more of course. /Thomas, Allgon Microwave Quote Link to comment
Aurora Posted October 9, 2006 Report Share Posted October 9, 2006 Hmm well, Just about all the programming I do. Recently used LV RT and FPGA on the CompactRIO platform to implement a machine conditioning system. Don't ask me about the analysis, I leave that to those who like math Other than that, numerous smaller test and measurement applications for various companies. Currently I'm trying to complete a control application for a life sciences company using LV RT and CompactFieldPoint. Later Quote Link to comment
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