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Yeah, grad school. I was expecting four years of college to filter out unserious students.
I genuinely hope they just ask me to do the whole thing, because I can do the whole thing myself. I brought them on because I need to learn to work with people. Naturally, I would always work alone, but I've been burned a few times trying to take on group projects solo and burning myself out, so I brought on some people to split the work.
I don't want to give out too many details in case they show up here, but I am trying to get them to write basic implementations of a few key features. They need to understand how the microprocessor actually communicates with the peripherals so they can configure it (and the peripherals) correctly. This topic is exactly what the course is about.
It's a coding-intensive project where we need to communicate with a few peripherals without locking up the rest of the system. There's no way to just "figure out" this stuff. You either read the code, or you read the docs, or you flounder.
Grad students are underpaid and overworked. Do they have any reason to care as much about the project as you do?
I thought the possibility of failing the class + the fact that they chose to be in my group voluntarily after warning them at every step of the process that this would be a challenge would be enough to motivate them.
Yeah only one of us has a job. We're not making any money for this lol.
So, none of you have stipends and it is a group project for class. See my original answer. They're not going to have the same priorities as you and, if you're going to work with a group, you need to accept that.
Throwing mountains of documentation at them isn't going to work. Talk to them and find out what it is they are finding difficult. Break it down into more manageable chunks. Rough-code it and work out the details when they have a big picture to work from. Or whatever it is that makes sense given what you're doing.