From c101acbdc3593936f6e966cb33e8ba72698a1a31 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Carl Kadie Date: Sat, 6 Sep 2025 14:05:45 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] Update Embassy in the Wild with no_std Raspberry Pi Pico clock demonstrating layered Embassy tasks (I also added a note that newer entries are at the top. If this isn't right, let me know or change.) --- docs/pages/embassy_in_the_wild.adoc | 4 ++++ 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+) diff --git a/docs/pages/embassy_in_the_wild.adoc b/docs/pages/embassy_in_the_wild.adoc index 620794c31..cedbedada 100644 --- a/docs/pages/embassy_in_the_wild.adoc +++ b/docs/pages/embassy_in_the_wild.adoc @@ -2,6 +2,10 @@ Here are known examples of real-world projects which make use of Embassy. Feel free to link:https://github.com/embassy-rs/embassy/blob/main/docs/pages/embassy_in_the_wild.adoc[add more]! +_newer entries at the top_ + +* link:https://github.com/CarlKCarlK/clock[Embassy Clock: Layered, modular bare-metal clock with emulation] +** A `no_std` Raspberry Pi Pico clock demonstrating layered Embassy tasks (Display->Blinker->Clock) for clean separation of multiplexing, blinking, and UI logic. Features single-button HH:MM/MM:SS time-set UI, heapless data structures, and a Renode emulator for hardware-free testing. See link:https://medium.com/@carlmkadie/how-rust-embassy-shine-on-embedded-devices-part-2-aad1adfccf72[this article] for details. * link:https://github.com/1-rafael-1/simple-robot[A simple tracked robot based on Raspberry Pi Pico 2] ** A hobbyist project building a tracked robot with basic autonomous and manual drive mode. * link:https://github.com/1-rafael-1/pi-pico-alarmclock-rust[A Raspberry Pi Pico W Alarmclock]