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Why I love coding IoT

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hardwareiot
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  • M markkuk

    honey the codewitch wrote:

    But nobody has implemented it yet to drive an LCD display

    ...other than Espressif, the makers of the ESP32 chip. There's a documented API[^] and a code example[^]. They call the 8-bit parallel bus driven by I2S hardware "i80 interface".

    H Offline
    H Offline
    honey the codewitch
    wrote on last edited by
    #13

    Fair enough. I must have missed that project.

    To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

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    • H honey the codewitch

      I always love to solve new problems. Today I realized I could use the hardware DMA capabilities of the I2S hardware on an ESP32 to drive 8 pins of data simultaneously w/ background transfers. The upshot is I can drive an LCD connected via an 8-bit parallel bus - at least in theory - and do DMA transfers with it. But nobody has implemented it yet to drive an LCD display, meaning I get first crack at it. There's an e-paper display that uses it, but it doesn't drive a controller chip - it drives the display panel directly with 14 pins or so, and that's a total one off. It's what gave me the idea though. The point is, in IoT land there are *new problems* - in a larger field where it seems like everything has been done before, and done to death. I love it.

      To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

      F Offline
      F Offline
      Fever905
      wrote on last edited by
      #14

      honey the codewitch wrote: The point is, in IoT land there are *new problems* - in a larger field where it seems like everything has been done before, and done to death. I think it's time to make some new shopping cart software!!

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      • H honey the codewitch

        I always love to solve new problems. Today I realized I could use the hardware DMA capabilities of the I2S hardware on an ESP32 to drive 8 pins of data simultaneously w/ background transfers. The upshot is I can drive an LCD connected via an 8-bit parallel bus - at least in theory - and do DMA transfers with it. But nobody has implemented it yet to drive an LCD display, meaning I get first crack at it. There's an e-paper display that uses it, but it doesn't drive a controller chip - it drives the display panel directly with 14 pins or so, and that's a total one off. It's what gave me the idea though. The point is, in IoT land there are *new problems* - in a larger field where it seems like everything has been done before, and done to death. I love it.

        To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

        J Offline
        J Offline
        jmaida
        wrote on last edited by
        #15

        You are having fun. I agree with your description of IoT land. I also think security is a big area in IoT land that needs constant attention. AI could be the big player there, as well, both in management and security.

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        • H honey the codewitch

          I always love to solve new problems. Today I realized I could use the hardware DMA capabilities of the I2S hardware on an ESP32 to drive 8 pins of data simultaneously w/ background transfers. The upshot is I can drive an LCD connected via an 8-bit parallel bus - at least in theory - and do DMA transfers with it. But nobody has implemented it yet to drive an LCD display, meaning I get first crack at it. There's an e-paper display that uses it, but it doesn't drive a controller chip - it drives the display panel directly with 14 pins or so, and that's a total one off. It's what gave me the idea though. The point is, in IoT land there are *new problems* - in a larger field where it seems like everything has been done before, and done to death. I love it.

          To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

          C Offline
          C Offline
          CPallini
          wrote on last edited by
          #16

          Quote:

          in a larger field where it seems like everything has been done before, and done to death.

          Do you mean JSON parsing? :-D

          "In testa che avete, Signor di Ceprano?" -- Rigoletto

          H 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • H honey the codewitch

            I always love to solve new problems. Today I realized I could use the hardware DMA capabilities of the I2S hardware on an ESP32 to drive 8 pins of data simultaneously w/ background transfers. The upshot is I can drive an LCD connected via an 8-bit parallel bus - at least in theory - and do DMA transfers with it. But nobody has implemented it yet to drive an LCD display, meaning I get first crack at it. There's an e-paper display that uses it, but it doesn't drive a controller chip - it drives the display panel directly with 14 pins or so, and that's a total one off. It's what gave me the idea though. The point is, in IoT land there are *new problems* - in a larger field where it seems like everything has been done before, and done to death. I love it.

            To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

            C Offline
            C Offline
            Cpichols
            wrote on last edited by
            #17

            Did you see the article on the MIT development of paper-thin speakers? Hoodie and hat inserts come to mind - I'm thinking for people with sound sensitivity in particular.

            H 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • H honey the codewitch

              I always love to solve new problems. Today I realized I could use the hardware DMA capabilities of the I2S hardware on an ESP32 to drive 8 pins of data simultaneously w/ background transfers. The upshot is I can drive an LCD connected via an 8-bit parallel bus - at least in theory - and do DMA transfers with it. But nobody has implemented it yet to drive an LCD display, meaning I get first crack at it. There's an e-paper display that uses it, but it doesn't drive a controller chip - it drives the display panel directly with 14 pins or so, and that's a total one off. It's what gave me the idea though. The point is, in IoT land there are *new problems* - in a larger field where it seems like everything has been done before, and done to death. I love it.

              To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

              B Offline
              B Offline
              Bruce Patin
              wrote on last edited by
              #18

              IBM used to use CRTs to save data. (Even before my IBM time)

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              • H honey the codewitch

                I always love to solve new problems. Today I realized I could use the hardware DMA capabilities of the I2S hardware on an ESP32 to drive 8 pins of data simultaneously w/ background transfers. The upshot is I can drive an LCD connected via an 8-bit parallel bus - at least in theory - and do DMA transfers with it. But nobody has implemented it yet to drive an LCD display, meaning I get first crack at it. There's an e-paper display that uses it, but it doesn't drive a controller chip - it drives the display panel directly with 14 pins or so, and that's a total one off. It's what gave me the idea though. The point is, in IoT land there are *new problems* - in a larger field where it seems like everything has been done before, and done to death. I love it.

                To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

                M Offline
                M Offline
                Matt McGuire
                wrote on last edited by
                #19

                I really miss working in IOT, I haven't touched any of my home projects in a couple years now, no longer work at somewhere that has a use for IOT. I'm afraid some of my skill set is fading. I work for a medium sized community college building software for them now, pay is good, benefits are excellent, the retirement package is over the top, and the work is absolutely boring. I feel like embedded work is much more interesting: pore over the datasheets, choose the correct chips for the job, master you're C skills, and enjoy the pain of getting an inert object to light up and do something. now with web development :( you spend most of the time looking up what the frameworks do as they change every year, what framework, what platform. you can never master this crap, it changes too quickly.

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                • C Cpichols

                  Did you see the article on the MIT development of paper-thin speakers? Hoodie and hat inserts come to mind - I'm thinking for people with sound sensitivity in particular.

                  H Offline
                  H Offline
                  honey the codewitch
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #20

                  That sounds amazing! (forgive the pun *ducks*)

                  To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

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                  • C CPallini

                    Quote:

                    in a larger field where it seems like everything has been done before, and done to death.

                    Do you mean JSON parsing? :-D

                    "In testa che avete, Signor di Ceprano?" -- Rigoletto

                    H Offline
                    H Offline
                    honey the codewitch
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #21

                    Hahaha. How about JSON parsing on an 8-bit CPU?

                    To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

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                    0
                    • H honey the codewitch

                      I always love to solve new problems. Today I realized I could use the hardware DMA capabilities of the I2S hardware on an ESP32 to drive 8 pins of data simultaneously w/ background transfers. The upshot is I can drive an LCD connected via an 8-bit parallel bus - at least in theory - and do DMA transfers with it. But nobody has implemented it yet to drive an LCD display, meaning I get first crack at it. There's an e-paper display that uses it, but it doesn't drive a controller chip - it drives the display panel directly with 14 pins or so, and that's a total one off. It's what gave me the idea though. The point is, in IoT land there are *new problems* - in a larger field where it seems like everything has been done before, and done to death. I love it.

                      To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.

                      S Offline
                      S Offline
                      sasadler
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #22

                      I spent my whole career designing/coding for embedded devices. I just love the low level stuff where I have complete control of the processor and associated hardware. 20+ years in the industrial control field and the remaining time programming TI DSPs. Fun stuff.

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