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Open programmable hardware offers tremendous opportunities for increased innovation, lower cost, greater flexibility, and customization in systems we can now build at the cloud’s far edge. However, programming hardware such as Field Programmable Gate Arrays has been extremely difficult and time-consuming due to proprietary tooling and inefficient development flows. This discussion introduces the Dynamic Infrastructure Service Layer (DISL) project, an open source abstraction layer that enables a practical and productive approach to co-designing custom FPGA systems. For software developers, DISL provides an interface where the entire hardware stack can be fully expressed and customized using only configuration files. It also provides a library of tools needed to manage FPGA deployments for both wired and wireless configurations. For hardware developers, DISL provides a mechanism for packaging IP blocks in a manner that makes these IP blocks portable across FPGA boards, as well as more conducive to customizations and modifications. Finally, the DISL system builder combines the system configuration (generated by domain-specific software) with hardware building blocks (from the DISL component library) to produce custom far-edge systems. The talk will demonstrate how this research, based on work at Boston University and Red Hat, supports quick builds of edge systems using a smart wireless video doorbell example. Speakers Ahmed Sanaullah, Research Scientist, Red Hat Jason Schlessman, Principal Software Engineer, Red Hat Conversation Leaders Ben Cushing, Chief Architect, Health & Life Sciences, Red Hat