Students and learners
VOSCOM.ONLINE helps people study device development through practical projects, not only through text: choose a controller, assemble an MWOS configuration, test an idea with AI Build, prepare demo firmware, and understand the terminal, schematics, components, and documentation.
This resource is intended only for users aged 18+
For safety reasons, this resource must not be used by people under 18. The platform involves electronics, firmware, hardware connection, network settings, content publication, and internal services, so work requires full legal capacity and personal responsibility.
- Minors must not independently register, accept terms, run builds, flash devices, or connect hardware through the platform.
- If materials are used in an educational organization, a responsible adult teacher, mentor, or legal representative must manage the process, equipment, and safety.
- The platform is in demo MVP mode: some functions may be incomplete, and any work with real hardware requires caution and verification.
Study on an engineering platform, not on abstract examples
This section is for adult students, junior engineers, lab participants, and independent learners who want to understand the full cycle of an embedded or IoT project.
Core learning directions inside VOSCOM
The platform combines several learning layers: device architecture, microcontroller programming, sensors, network protocols, documentation, and controlled firmware builds.
Modular firmware architecture
A student can view a project as a set of clear blocks: controller, sensors, connectivity, debugging, OTA, and user functions.
- Understand project structure, MML/configuration, and links between modules.
- See why modularity speeds development and reduces firmware chaos.
AI help for project preparation
AI does not replace the engineer, but helps move faster from a task description to a project draft and action list.
- Formulate tasks for ESP32, STM32, Arduino, and common IoT scenarios.
- Prepare drafts, validate configurations, and explain build errors.
Controllers, sensors, and components
Learn which boards, modules, interfaces, and sensors fit a specific task.
- ESP32/ESP8266, STM32, Arduino, UART, I2C, SPI, GPIO, power, and basic peripherals.
- Work with the component library, module descriptions, and templates for typical devices.
Build, download, and flash
The learning flow shows how a firmware file appears from a configuration and how to prepare for writing it to a controller.
- Demo builds, artifact list, and transition to the flashing window with filled parameters.
- Understand that the real device is flashed by the human user, not by an external AI.
Terminal and diagnostics
The terminal helps study serial communication, message logs, timestamps, and device behavior.
- Connect to a device, view logs, save the journal, and analyze messages.
- Keeping terminal and firmware flashing separate makes diagnostics clearer.
News, Market, chats, and documentation
Students can learn to prepare materials, read news, inspect product cards, and discuss projects in work sections.
- Publications and products go through moderation, so training content should not pollute the public site.
- Documentation, components, and discussions help turn learning work into a clear engineering result.
Directions where a student can grow
The student track can work as a personal growth route: start with simple training builds, then move toward independent projects, documentation, module validation, and team work.
What can be built on the platform
These examples fit learning and demonstrate VOSCOM AI FORGE capabilities at the MVP stage.
Temperature and humidity monitor
ESP32 or ESP32-S3, BME280/DS18B20, Wi-Fi, MQTT, logging, and simple telemetry.
Learning serial terminal
Controller connection, log analysis, message filtering, and experiment journal export.
Relay or actuator controller
Safe control logic, input/output states, and basic emergency protection scenarios.
Component card or learning note
Sensor description, wiring diagram, parameters, limits, and a usage example.
Small lab project
One participant prepares schematics, another MWOS configuration, a third documentation, and a fourth verification and presentation.
Flux, Solder, and Gold Wire in the learning track
The platform includes an internal economy. For students it can work as a clear progress system: useful actions, careful materials, helping others, and engineering contribution receive measurable internal value.
- Flux can reflect regular useful activity: completing learning paths, publishing quality training materials, and helping in discussions.
- Solder can be granted for more complex contributions: verified modules, good component descriptions, testing, and mentoring.
- Gold Wire belongs to the premium and commercial layer. Exact economy rules will be refined as the MVP develops.
- Internal currency may be spent on additional limits, project slots, priority builds, and expanded learning capabilities.
- Part of the currency may be used for access to more complex tasks, expert review, mentoring, and special profile functions.
- In the MVP this is a working model for motivation and growth: exact prices, limits, and spending rules will be refined gradually.
The best entry point is a small real project
Start with a simple task: one controller, one sensor, a clear goal, and a clean description. Then add AI Build, terminal, flashing, documentation, and gradually expand the project.