eitherway | 3 years ago | on: ESP32 Buyer’s Guide: Different Chips, Firmware, Sensors
eitherway's comments
eitherway | 3 years ago | on: ESP32 Buyer’s Guide: Different Chips, Firmware, Sensors
Corrected it.
eitherway | 3 years ago | on: ESP32 Buyer’s Guide: Different Chips, Firmware, Sensors
eitherway | 3 years ago | on: ESP32 Buyer’s Guide: Different Chips, Firmware, Sensors
Would you mind explaining what the advantage is over the ESP-IDF or the Arduino-SDK?
eitherway | 3 years ago | on: ESP32 Buyer’s Guide: Different Chips, Firmware, Sensors
I am only starting in the IOT Hardware World.
eitherway | 3 years ago | on: ESP32 Buyer’s Guide: Different Chips, Firmware, Sensors
The main feature seems to be that it's an open architecture, so you don't have to rely on the things that a manufacturer provides you.
I also added your comparison table to the article.
And thank you for the compliment!
eitherway | 3 years ago | on: ESP32 Buyer’s Guide: Different Chips, Firmware, Sensors
eitherway | 3 years ago | on: ESP32 Buyer’s Guide: Different Chips, Firmware, Sensors
I added a note to the Article.
eitherway | 3 years ago | on: ESP32 Buyer’s Guide: Different Chips, Firmware, Sensors
I'm also working on my writing skills. So forgive me for styling errors.
I know the ESP32-Cx is based on the RISC-V architecture. Could you elaborate why this is a feature or in what way this is an advantage?
eitherway | 3 years ago | on: ESP32 Buyer’s Guide: Different Chips, Firmware, Sensors
I haven't used it, but there now seems to be some good support in the ESP-IDF Framework: https://docs.espressif.com/projects/esp-idf/en/latest/esp32/...
Wouldn't it be better to just recommend the S3, where there is currently only one version available?
There are like a dozen different versions for the ESP32.
"Two or one CPU core(s) with adjustable clock frequency, ranging from 80 MHz to 240 MHz"
In this case it seems to be the better choice to just use the ESP-S3 with better encryption support and support for Cameras.