
In January 2025, Jude Osemene developed and integrated a complete ADF5611 frequency synthesizer driver for the analogdevicesinc/no-OS repository, focusing on SPI communication, parameter control, and IIO framework integration. He expanded the ADF4382/4383 family with fast calibration using lookup tables, multi-chip synchronization, and fractional mode bleed optimization, while also adding core bias table support and a default 20 GHz initialization for the ADF4383. Working primarily in C and Makefile, Jude emphasized robust documentation and test coverage, resulting in improved device observability, configurability, and production calibration workflows. His work demonstrated depth in embedded systems and hardware interfacing.

January 2025 focused on delivering driver support and performance enhancements for the analogdevicesinc/no-OS repository. Implemented end-to-end ADF5611 frequency synthesizer driver with SPI, parameter control, frequency calculations, and lifecycle (init/removal) plus IIO integration and user-facing documentation. Expanded ADF4382/4383 family capabilities with fast calibration (LUT and IIO wrappers), EZSync/Timed Sync multi-chip synchronization, core bias table support for ADF4383, bleed optimization for fractional mode, and a default initialization target of 20 GHz. These efforts improved device observability, configurability, and cross-chip synchronization, driving faster time-to-value and more robust calibration in production.
January 2025 focused on delivering driver support and performance enhancements for the analogdevicesinc/no-OS repository. Implemented end-to-end ADF5611 frequency synthesizer driver with SPI, parameter control, frequency calculations, and lifecycle (init/removal) plus IIO integration and user-facing documentation. Expanded ADF4382/4383 family capabilities with fast calibration (LUT and IIO wrappers), EZSync/Timed Sync multi-chip synchronization, core bias table support for ADF4383, bleed optimization for fractional mode, and a default initialization target of 20 GHz. These efforts improved device observability, configurability, and cross-chip synchronization, driving faster time-to-value and more robust calibration in production.
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