It streamlines the development process by simplifying the creation of new rosters and pipelines. The Ad Hoc Roster can manage multiple rosters that belong to specific online pipelines. With this resource, Vision clients can manage custom rosters with specific notification types, delays and notification re-tries in a simple-to-use interface. The winner is Ad Hoc Roster by Will Rooney. And now it's time for the grand prize winner. This resource is a smartphone app that allows you to control the temperature in your greenhouse remotely. The Greenhouse Temperature Control App by Mathias Bjerglund Poulsen is another of our finalists. This is a demonstration that reads room and vent data from the Flare API, displays it in tables on views and dynamically creates tags based on UDT tags, that could be used for additional functionality. Paul: The Flare API demo by Keith King is one of the three finalists.
So, here are the top three entries we received.
Each of the top three entries will be featured on the Ignition Exchange, and our winner will receive an Amazon gift card. We received a lot of exciting entries, so today we're announcing the top three entries as well as our one winner. In this contest, we invited the Ignition community to create an innovative resource and share it with the community by uploading it to the Ignition Exchange.
And I'm joined by our panelists: our VP of Technology, Colby Clegg, and our Director of Software Engineering, Carl Gould.Īlso, before we get started, we wanted to announce the winner of the Ignition Exchange Challenge. I'm the Training Content Manager at Inductive Automation, and I'll be the moderator for today's panel. We are really excited to have so many folks participating today.
Thanks for joining us for our first-ever livestream Developer Panel. Paul: Hello, and welcome to “The Developer Panel: What's Next for Ignition” at ICC 2020. Don’t miss this unique opportunity to gain key insights surrounding the future of Ignition and answer questions you may have about the software in an extended Q&A portion of the session. Join Inductive Automation’s Co-Directors of Software Engineering, Carl Gould and Colby Clegg, as they share what’s in store for Ignition for the next year and beyond in this popular session. While its core purpose has always been the same, Ignition is constantly evolving, allowing its users to do more with fewer roadblocks along the way. Ignition Exchange Community-made Ignition resources.Ignition Maker Edition Made for hobbyist and educational use.Ignition Edge Made for field and OEM devices at the edge.If it is in the current directory, use license.ipl for the location.Īutomatically answers yes to any prompt that may appear in the above commands, such as permission to overwrite an existing file. You must supply the location of the license.ipl file. The unactivation_message.txt file is saved in the current directory.Īpplies a license.ipl file that was downloaded from the Inductive Automation website.
Performs a thread dump in the Gateway and prints the dump to the command-line.Ĭreates an unactivation_message.txt file that you can use to unactivate a license via the Inductive Automation website.
Additionally, the -y command now skips prompts asking for a Gateway name override.Įnables a password change for the initial user. Specifies a Gateway name while restoring a backup. The following feature is new in Ignition version 8.0.3Ĭlick here to check out the other new features