Re: [Asterisk-Users] Is there hardware to remote control

2004-12-24 Thread Lyle Giese
I found this interesting box at qkits.com  QK108

It has 8 relay outputs and 4 inputs. It's controlled via RS-232c(serial
port) instead of a printer port.  I have an 8 port serial card in a linux
server to control a bunch of stuff.  I have apache on that server and can
control the relays via a cgi script.  I found it very easy to program a
serial port via perl and with an 8 port serial card(from Perle). You can
have a bunch of stuff hanging off it, like a 4 probe temp kit (QK 145) and a
ups and an RS-232 voltmeter to monitor the commerical power coming in and


I suspose it would be easy to take this even further to write AGI scripts
and dial an extension and let * announce the temperature or status of those
inputs and to control the outputs of the QK108.

I also use it with their K2639 to monitor the sump pits, monitoring for sump
pump failure.(therefore high water levels).

Lyle

- Original Message - 
From: David Cook [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: asterisk-users@lists.digium.com
Sent: Monday, December 20, 2004 9:10 AM
Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] Is there hardware to remote control


  From: Ronald Wiplinger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: [Asterisk-Users] Is there hardware to remote control
  available?
  To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion
  asterisk-users@lists.digium.com
  Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed
 
  I am looking for a hardware, which can turn on / off (control) via
  the
  dial plan.
  Is something available?

 You can run an AGI from within your diaplan which can do anything
 available to the host machine. As for turning things on/off, you have
 several options.

 a) serial port control;
 b) parallel port control;
 c) attached microcontroller;
 d) X-10 signals.

 Please exuse this for going OT into home automation stuff, but in an
 effort to answer the original question, here goes ...

 a) I have often used a little program that flips the DTR  RTS signals
 on a serial port (independently so you can control two things). You
 need to turn on/off a logic state or an LED that is fine. If you need
 to switch a larger electical load, put a solid state relay on that pin.
 I have my laser printer and my pool pump controlled that way.

 b) Parallel port works basically the same way with the 8 output pins on
 the connector that can be controlled. Haven't actually done this
 though.
 Lastly, connect a microcontroller like a Parallax Basic Stamp to your
 server where you can write code that runs on the microcontroller and
 does numerous things pseudo autonomously from

 c) Microcontroller like the Parallax Basic Stamp series. This allows you
 to run a program on this little computer device (100.00) that was
 made for I/O control. It can do all kinds of things pseudo
 autonomously and feed back the info to the PC.

 d) X10 have several interfaces for PC's. I like a little one called the
 Firecracker interface. It uses an RS232C line and can control devices
 by sending radio signals from it to a reciever module that is plugged
 into a wall socket. It then embeds the cammands you sent it into the
 electrical circuits in your home. Another module then plugs into the
 wall somewhere and you plug devices into it. The little wall modules
 recieves the signal coming along the electrical lines and turns the
 device on/off/dim, etc. The reason I like the Firecracker is that it is
 a dumb device. All program code must exist on the PC therefore I have
 more control. They have other devices which you download program code
 to then they are autonomous which I don't think is what you are looking
 for.

 I use a)  d) extensively here. If anyone wants the code or more info,
 just ask.

 David Cook
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Re: [Asterisk-Users] Is there hardware to remote control

2004-12-24 Thread Neil Cherry
Lyle Giese wrote:
I found this interesting box at qkits.com  QK108
It has 8 relay outputs and 4 inputs. It's controlled via RS-232c(serial
port) instead of a printer port.  I have an 8 port serial card in a linux
server to control a bunch of stuff.  I have apache on that server and can
control the relays via a cgi script.  I found it very easy to program a
serial port via perl and with an 8 port serial card(from Perle). You can
have a bunch of stuff hanging off it, like a 4 probe temp kit (QK 145) and a
ups and an RS-232 voltmeter to monitor the commerical power coming in and

I suspose it would be easy to take this even further to write AGI scripts
and dial an extension and let * announce the temperature or status of those
inputs and to control the outputs of the QK108.
I also use it with their K2639 to monitor the sump pits, monitoring for sump
pump failure.(therefore high water levels).
Cool, I've got to check that out.
For the OP, check my 1st web page below for various odds and ends
for the hardware and software that can be run on a *nix box. It's
not directly * related but if you can run scripts you can take
advantage of my collection of links.
--
Linux Home Automation Neil Cherry   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://home.comcast.net/~ncherry/   (Text only)
http://hcs.sourceforge.net/ (HCS II)
http://linuxha.blogspot.com/My HA Blog
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Re: [Asterisk-Users] Is there hardware to remote control

2004-12-20 Thread David Cook
 From: Ronald Wiplinger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: [Asterisk-Users] Is there hardware to remote control
   available?
 To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion
   asterisk-users@lists.digium.com
 Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed

 I am looking for a hardware, which can turn on / off (control) via
 the
 dial plan.
 Is something available?

You can run an AGI from within your diaplan which can do anything
available to the host machine. As for turning things on/off, you have
several options.

a) serial port control;
b) parallel port control;
c) attached microcontroller;
d) X-10 signals.

Please exuse this for going OT into home automation stuff, but in an
effort to answer the original question, here goes ...

a) I have often used a little program that flips the DTR  RTS signals
on a serial port (independently so you can control two things). You
need to turn on/off a logic state or an LED that is fine. If you need
to switch a larger electical load, put a solid state relay on that pin.
I have my laser printer and my pool pump controlled that way.

b) Parallel port works basically the same way with the 8 output pins on
the connector that can be controlled. Haven't actually done this
though.
Lastly, connect a microcontroller like a Parallax Basic Stamp to your
server where you can write code that runs on the microcontroller and
does numerous things pseudo autonomously from

c) Microcontroller like the Parallax Basic Stamp series. This allows you
to run a program on this little computer device (100.00) that was
made for I/O control. It can do all kinds of things pseudo
autonomously and feed back the info to the PC.

d) X10 have several interfaces for PC's. I like a little one called the
Firecracker interface. It uses an RS232C line and can control devices
by sending radio signals from it to a reciever module that is plugged
into a wall socket. It then embeds the cammands you sent it into the
electrical circuits in your home. Another module then plugs into the
wall somewhere and you plug devices into it. The little wall modules
recieves the signal coming along the electrical lines and turns the
device on/off/dim, etc. The reason I like the Firecracker is that it is
a dumb device. All program code must exist on the PC therefore I have
more control. They have other devices which you download program code
to then they are autonomous which I don't think is what you are looking
for.

I use a)  d) extensively here. If anyone wants the code or more info,
just ask.

David Cook
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RE: [Asterisk-Users] Is there hardware to remote control

2004-12-20 Thread dean collins
Hi David,
I think it would be really cool if you could add this to the wikki under
asterisk + home automation . There is more than enough users interested
in reading what you've down.

Although I wont be looking into this for another few months I like the
idea of this and would be looking to support wherever I can.


Cheers,
Dean


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of David Cook
Sent: Monday, December 20, 2004 10:10 AM
To: asterisk-users@lists.digium.com
Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] Is there hardware to remote control

 From: Ronald Wiplinger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: [Asterisk-Users] Is there hardware to remote control
   available?
 To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion
   asterisk-users@lists.digium.com
 Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed

 I am looking for a hardware, which can turn on / off (control) via
 the
 dial plan.
 Is something available?

You can run an AGI from within your diaplan which can do anything
available to the host machine. As for turning things on/off, you have
several options.

a) serial port control;
b) parallel port control;
c) attached microcontroller;
d) X-10 signals.

Please exuse this for going OT into home automation stuff, but in an
effort to answer the original question, here goes ...

a) I have often used a little program that flips the DTR  RTS signals
on a serial port (independently so you can control two things). You
need to turn on/off a logic state or an LED that is fine. If you need
to switch a larger electical load, put a solid state relay on that pin.
I have my laser printer and my pool pump controlled that way.

b) Parallel port works basically the same way with the 8 output pins on
the connector that can be controlled. Haven't actually done this
though.
Lastly, connect a microcontroller like a Parallax Basic Stamp to your
server where you can write code that runs on the microcontroller and
does numerous things pseudo autonomously from

c) Microcontroller like the Parallax Basic Stamp series. This allows you
to run a program on this little computer device (100.00) that was
made for I/O control. It can do all kinds of things pseudo
autonomously and feed back the info to the PC.

d) X10 have several interfaces for PC's. I like a little one called the
Firecracker interface. It uses an RS232C line and can control devices
by sending radio signals from it to a reciever module that is plugged
into a wall socket. It then embeds the cammands you sent it into the
electrical circuits in your home. Another module then plugs into the
wall somewhere and you plug devices into it. The little wall modules
recieves the signal coming along the electrical lines and turns the
device on/off/dim, etc. The reason I like the Firecracker is that it is
a dumb device. All program code must exist on the PC therefore I have
more control. They have other devices which you download program code
to then they are autonomous which I don't think is what you are looking
for.

I use a)  d) extensively here. If anyone wants the code or more info,
just ask.

David Cook
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