A micro also has far better power-down options (nA) and shorter activity
periods. It all adds up.
> On Aug 2, 2017, at 5:29 PM, Loren Amelang wrote:
>
> On Wednesday, August 2, 2017 at 10:31 AM,
> owfs-developers-requ...@lists.sourceforge.net wrote:
>> 1. Re: Arduino yun as
On Wednesday, August 2, 2017 at 10:31 AM,
owfs-developers-requ...@lists.sourceforge.net wrote:
> 1. Re: Arduino yun as wifi 1wire master
I keep reading these posts saying Wi-Fi is a power hog. I just ordered a pair
of Raspberry Pi Zero W boards to find out... All the web sites say that the
On Wed, 2 Aug 2017 02:48:09 +0200
Jan Kandziora wrote:
> Am 02.08.2017 um 01:17 schrieb Michael Hughes:
> >
> > If for some reason the leg that a DS2450 is on drops off line and
> > then comes back online, the values that are retrieved don't make
> > any sense. If I restart my
They're great, but WiFi is terrible for power, and RF916 (or even LoRa) are
great for range where Bluetooth is not. Pin compatibility with power module, a
well-developed ecosystem ... I've done my research on this, and for low-power
remote nodes these are the goods. They're also great for power
All the cool kids are using ESP8266 modules these days.
Andrew
On Aug 2, 2017 4:14 PM, "Dr. Trigon" wrote:
> Hi Colin
>
> >wall. Low power + existing libraries for 1Wire. This RF unit (I use
> >Moteinos) would cost you about $20. The gateway unit would also cost
> >you
>
>The one thing I see missing is if you run it on a PIE and send it to
>another device over wifi then you eliminate any chance of thunder
>?crashing a whole system and I mean everything in your home! ?Of course
>I live on the beach and we do have lot of storms! ?I just remember when
>I had a bolt
Hi Colin
>wall. Low power + existing libraries for 1Wire. This RF unit (I use
>Moteinos) would cost you about $20. The gateway unit would also cost
>you
>about $20. I send things around encrypted, data format json strings,
>and
>it's very easy to manage. If you want to shove this into 1Wire, do