Whoa nelly! This web site is running entirely on an 8266, responds instantly, and is handling the kiss of death associated with HN linking with no problem. That is amazing.
this is indeed probably the best low-cost wifi chip out there, most of the esp8266 modules are still acting as an add-on module for other host-cpus(e.g. arduino) though, wish it can run something like freertos or contik on its own so it can be a IoT sensor standalone(maybe it's there already, had not checked it in the last few months).
TI had similar products but it's too expensive, in that sense IoT hardware has to be 'made-in-china'
i am continuously impressed by the esp8266. i have been building things on and off with them for the last couple of months, and bought enough of them to give out.
I bought one as well although I didn't do anything yet, would you mind share what you did/recommend doing? I was thinking to make a temperature sensor monitoring device, as I have an arduino that is doing the job now
For someone wanting to tinker but not being great at electronics project, what is the easiest way to:
- Play with the chip (testing interfaces, deploying code etc)
- "Deploy" it (ie. connect it to ground power, via 230v-USB connector or similar?
Onthe software side, the Arduino programming environment now supports the ESP8266. This makes it very easy to start playing.
One hint - to program, reboot with the programming pin (GPIO0) grounded, but take it back to 3.3V before you start programming. That took me a couple of hours to figure out.
This reboot is forced, we had over 3k requests with no hanging of whatsoever. It just helps when traffic is huge. This particular chip (serving linked website) is running at 80Mhz.
Plus, running micropython this board rocks. Imagine a repl on the USB serial interface. My branch is rock solid posting millions of messages from python to a webserver.
We've been running a series of experiments to try to mitigate the randomness of what achieves liftoff from /newest. We started working on this because many users complained that good stories were getting ignored, and we looked closely and found that this was true. Below are links to a few comments I've posted about this over the last year, if anyone's interested. The next experiment will probably be to add a profile setting that people can turn on to let the
software repost their story at a good time, rather than having to get an email invitation—although to judge from the feedback we've been getting, people seem to like the emails.
droithomme|10 years ago
canow|10 years ago
ausjke|10 years ago
TI had similar products but it's too expensive, in that sense IoT hardware has to be 'made-in-china'
tdicola|10 years ago
jerrysievert|10 years ago
nmjohn|10 years ago
foxylad|10 years ago
ausjke|10 years ago
jerrysievert|10 years ago
at less than $2 each, they really are amazing.
100timesthis|10 years ago
placeybordeaux|10 years ago
zapt02|10 years ago
jerrysievert|10 years ago
couple it with a small breadboard and an mb102, and you're good to go.
foxylad|10 years ago
One hint - to program, reboot with the programming pin (GPIO0) grounded, but take it back to 3.3V before you start programming. That took me a couple of hours to figure out.
rasz_pl|10 years ago
160MHz http://www.esp8266.com/viewtopic.php?p=8107#p8107
also "Rebooting every 400 users" doesnt sound all that stable :)
solusipse|10 years ago
mianos|10 years ago
mafuyu|10 years ago
Retr0spectrum|10 years ago
solusipse|10 years ago
tdicola|10 years ago
edit: Yeah, https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=10369608 Weird, what's a repost invite?
solusipse|10 years ago
dang|10 years ago
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9828818
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8790134
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9866140