<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><title>Strive2Code</title><subtitle>Blog author</subtitle><rights>© 2025</rights><updated>2026-04-18T17:57:33Z</updated><generator uri="https://strive2code.com">Moonglade v14.20.0</generator><entry><id>f0f6cd7b-be32-4c27-aa80-c93c5852026b</id><title>Meadow Hack Kit  Pro (Part 2)</title><updated>2021-12-29T09:59:47Z</updated><published>2021-12-29T09:59:47Z</published><link href="https://strive2code.com/post/2021/12/29/meadow-hack-kit-pro-part-2" hreflang="en-us" /><author><name>Alex K.</name><email>alex@strive2code.com</email></author><category term="IoT" /><category term="Hardware" /><category term=".NET" /><content>This part is all about completing the pre-requisites. We've started with the board assembly in Part 1 here, and to proceed with the application development, we need to put the board together (which requires some soldering) and flash the Meadow OS to it.

Step 1
To complete this step, we would need the following:


1 Meadow board (aka 'base')


1 Wooden Wilderness Labs protoboard (or breadboard)</content></entry><entry><id>f152b78c-187b-458d-b960-8fdc423f880b</id><title>Meadow Hack Kit  Pro (Part 1)</title><updated>2021-12-28T10:05:31Z</updated><published>2021-12-28T10:05:31Z</published><link href="https://strive2code.com/post/2021/12/28/meadow-hack-kit-pro-part-1" hreflang="en-us" /><author><name>Alex K.</name><email>alex@strive2code.com</email></author><category term="IoT" /><category term="Hardware" /><category term=".NET" /><content>Today I'm talking about Meadow Hack Kit. If you're unfamiliar with this technology or want to learn more, keep reading. Meadow is a complete Enterprise-grade IoT platform that runs .NET applications on embeddable microcontrollers. It's a plug-and-play IoT library with a huge selection of peripheral drivers and a prototype-friendly developer kit that enables you to build prototypes on real</content></entry></feed>