Remove title page from README

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Danila Fedorin 2020-05-28 23:39:47 -07:00
parent b0fc7c1c76
commit f658a14458

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@ -15,54 +15,10 @@
\providecommand{\tightlist}{% \providecommand{\tightlist}{%
\setlength{\itemsep}{0pt}\setlength{\parskip}{0pt}} \setlength{\itemsep}{0pt}\setlength{\parskip}{0pt}}
\def \CapstoneTeamName{Automated Fenceless Grazing} \title{Project Documentation}
\def \CapstoneTeamNumber{CS3}
\def \GroupMemberOne{Ryan Alder}
\def \GroupMemberTwo{Danila Fedorin}
\def \GroupMemberThree{Matthew Sessions}
\def \CapstoneProjectName{Automated Fenceless Grazing}
\def \CapstoneSponsorCompany{Oregon State University}
\def \CapstoneSponsorPerson{Bechir Hamdaoui}
\def \DocType{Project Documentation}
\newcommand{\NameSigPair}[1]{\par
\makebox[2.75in][r]{#1} \hfil \makebox[3.25in]{\makebox[2.25in]{\hrulefill} \hfill \makebox[.75in]{\hrulefill}}
\par\vspace{-12pt} \textit{\tiny\noindent
\makebox[2.75in]{} \hfil \makebox[3.25in]{\makebox[2.25in][r]{Signature} \hfill \makebox[.75in][r]{Date}}}}
\begin{document} \begin{document}
\maketitle
\begin{titlepage}
\pagenumbering{gobble}
\begin{singlespace}
% 4. If you have a logo, use this includegraphics command to put it on the coversheet.
%\includegraphics[height=4cm]{CompanyLogo}
\par\vspace{.2in}
\centering
\scshape{
\huge CS Capstone \DocType \par
{\large\today}\par
\vspace{.5in}
\textbf{\Huge\CapstoneProjectName}\par
\vfill
{\large Prepared for}\par
\Huge \CapstoneSponsorCompany\par
\vspace{5pt}
{\Large\NameSigPair{\CapstoneSponsorPerson}\par}
{\large Prepared by }\par
Group\CapstoneTeamNumber\par
% 5. comment out the line below this one if you do not wish to name your team
\CapstoneTeamName\par
\vspace{5pt}
{\Large
\NameSigPair{\GroupMemberOne}\par
\NameSigPair{\GroupMemberTwo}\par
\NameSigPair{\GroupMemberThree}\par
}
\vspace{20pt}
}
\end{singlespace}
\end{titlepage}
\section{Project Overview} \section{Project Overview}
Our project consists of three major components: a series of end-devices attached to each animal, a gateway hosted in a central location, and a network server implementing the LoRaWAN capabilities. Much of the communication between these devices is via LoRa, the physical communication protocol. Each end-device communicates back and forth with the gateway using LoRa and LoRaWAN as illustrated in the image linked below. A Raspberry Pi is the main computer that implements both the LoRaWAN gateway and the HTTP API server. The LoRaWAN gateway intercepts communications and forwards LoRa packets received from each end-device to the network server over the desired backend. This depends on the internet setup at each seperate farm, and can vary between Ethernet or Wi-Fi to a router connected to an ISP modem. The gateway also sends packets back to each end-device when the user has provided a new set of boundary coordinates. Our project consists of three major components: a series of end-devices attached to each animal, a gateway hosted in a central location, and a network server implementing the LoRaWAN capabilities. Much of the communication between these devices is via LoRa, the physical communication protocol. Each end-device communicates back and forth with the gateway using LoRa and LoRaWAN as illustrated in the image linked below. A Raspberry Pi is the main computer that implements both the LoRaWAN gateway and the HTTP API server. The LoRaWAN gateway intercepts communications and forwards LoRa packets received from each end-device to the network server over the desired backend. This depends on the internet setup at each seperate farm, and can vary between Ethernet or Wi-Fi to a router connected to an ISP modem. The gateway also sends packets back to each end-device when the user has provided a new set of boundary coordinates.