The WiFi HAT
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David Feugey (2125) 2709 posts |
http://shop.elesar.co.uk/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=83 A very interesting product. I have three questions, that will probably help some other users: A lot of people stop today their RISC OS evaluation because of the lack of WiFi. |
David Feugey (2125) 2709 posts |
Hum, I’m stupid :) |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8172 posts |
Hmm, interesting find David. The link you gave produced a page not found so things have moved around a little since you looked. Only suitable for use with RISC OS, the WiFi HAT requires a RISC OS soft loadable driver module (see resources)1. Includes an easy to use desktop WiFi Manager, which lists the nearby access points as well as displaying the current connection status. Due to its tight integration with RISC OS the remaining familiar Internet tools in !Configure are used to set up the networking and monitor its status. and
I’m thinking Elesar have a product that will be available at the stand this weekend. I hope they have a good stock as I suspect most visitors with a Pi will be wanting one. Note: Offloading elements of the network connection work to the NIC is regularly done in the MS PC world to improve throughput. 1 Resources |
Gavin Smith (1413) 95 posts |
Received mine this morning and I’m posting this from my Raspberry Pi running RISC OS on wifi! Hurrah! A few early notes: I haven’t done speed tests and the like yet (the postman only delivered it an hour ago!) but it just works and I’m very pleased as I can now disconnect the annoying USB-Ethernet adapter from my MacBook Pro and the Ethernet cable that snakes across my desk. If you want to pick one up at the show, you can order it on the website for collection, saving you a couple of quid and guaranteeing you’ll get one. I’m sure this is going to be a big seller, so if you want one, you might want to get in there quickly. As I said, I’ll do more tests but at this early stage I am very pleased with it. |
Elesar (2416) 73 posts |
The outline follows the foundation recommended HAT outline, and the overall thickness is 4mm (1.6mm for the PCB and 2.4mm for the electronics). The 2 pin header shown in the photo is to enable writes to the ID EEPROM which isn’t needed in normal use so could be removed if height was an issue.
There are 25 HATs on a panel so there’s an administrative saving for any multiples of that, beyond that you’d need to get to 100’s to gain significantly. For example: a solder paste stencil costs £250, so amortising that over only 10 is £25/HAT, amortising over 1000 is 25p.
The elves at the factory do all the soldering. |
Elesar (2416) 73 posts |
Both links given are correct, the ‘path=20_46’ bit in the middle is just so the right breadcrumb trail is shown, but not essential. |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8172 posts |
Theoretically – however in practice using Firefox the link David gave drops out to this page with a message “The page you requested cannot be found!” displayed in the lower portion. On IE11 the redirect to http://shop.elesar.co.uk/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=83 occurs. |
Steffen Huber (91) 1953 posts |
In my practice with Firefox, the link from David just worked. But nobody understands The Web nowadays… |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8172 posts |
Just as it does for me, now.
Some people do (I’m thinking Sprow made a change), some don’t (reference the certificate errors I mentioned some while back on provider web sites, and more so a certain agency that’s supposed to guide, direct?, things digital for my employer). |
Grahame Parish (436) 481 posts |
It depends – as the link is displayed in the first post, it will fail if you click on it as a link. In Firefox in Windows, if you highlight the whole URL, extending past the ‘link’ to the end of the line, then right click on the highlighted text, Open Link, it will work. |
Martin Avison (27) 1494 posts |
So if using the WiFi HAT means the GPIO pins are not easily available for other connections, does that mean a RTC cannot be plugged in? Surely many users have fitted an RTC for RISC OS use? I do realise that NetTime will set the time if online, but if offline…? |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8172 posts |
Does the RTC not allow anything stacked on top of it? Or are we talking about two items needing the GPIO pins and wanting exclusive access? |
Chris Hall (132) 3559 posts |
One solution would be to make the Hat available without the 40 pin socket and allow the user to solder a long-pin socket so that it can be stacked. |
Raik (463) 2061 posts |
RTC should be not a problem. Use I2C and only one time at boot, as I remember right what Jeffrey wrote a “long time” ago. |
Martin Avison (27) 1494 posts |
Mine fit on the 6 pairs of pins away from the USB sockets. They do not have pins showing above. My two are both CJE offerings – I do note that there are now many more variations available, some with pass-through headers, although that may well require taller cases! Whether they would clash on access to the same GPIO pins is obviously another question. |
Andrew Conroy (370) 740 posts |
The RTC uses I2C whereas the WiFi Hat appears to simply be a WiFi-SPI bridge unit, so they shouldn’t clash on GPIO pins / device IDs. You’d need to get an RTC with 40pin pass-thru header and then plonk the WiFi Hat on top of that, which would make it a bit tall but should work. It would be nice if the WiFi Hat was available with pass-through pins too, so you could still use the GPIO pins. Given how much I use GPIO, then if I got a WiFi Hat I’d have to take the existing header off and fit a pass-through one myself (hello voided warranty!). |
David Feugey (2125) 2709 posts |
Interesting. I work on a project under RISC OS, with three modes of delivery:
Seems to be a bug in the forum. |
Rick Murray (539) 13851 posts |
Textile hates you and messed up your URL on purpose. Feel free to try to analyse Textile’s inner logic, how it does stuff, and why it does what it does. |
Anthony Vaughan Bartram (2454) 458 posts |
… |
Elesar (2416) 73 posts |
The HAT specification doesn’t allow for piggybacking HATs, for 2 reasons:
the motivation seems to be simplicity – the foundation wanted an expansion concept that ‘just worked’ without needing to fiddle with ISA card jumper settings and similar, and most of the signals on J8 are point-to-point anyway unlike a typical data/address bus. That said, there’s nothing using the main IIC bus on the WiFi HAT, so as Andrew suggests an RTC from CJE with long pins will work electrically albeit a bit tall mechanically. |
Chris Hall (132) 3559 posts |
An OLED module and a RTC from CJE (which both use the IIC bus) could (both) be plugged in electrically, just need to think how to arrange it mechanically. Does the WiFi Hat use the serial port pins 8 and 10 (RXDATA and TXDATA)? One thought for the Pi 4 – could a keyboard be attached using the IIC bus (no USB on Pi 4)? |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8172 posts |
Perhaps, if board real estate permits, an RTC could be built on the WiFi HAT? |
Chris Hall (132) 3559 posts |
Better still, could the WiFi Hat use the unused real estate to have some development tracks like ProtoPAL or similar. The user could then add something simple. |
Rick Murray (539) 13851 posts |
That’s why many EEPROMs have a link for setting the IIC address. This could be “recycled” in hats as to be “first”, “second” [, “third”] board. The address of the EEPROM will give the board level, and it’s priority (if necessary). Yes, this means a jumper or two. Not the end of the world. Indeed, a weak pullup (or pulldown, as appropriate) could have a default board with no jumpers. Plug’n’plug. Only reaching for the settings if and when necessary. Certainly, there’s a lot of stuff that could be hooked to GPIO, so restricting a hat to literally claiming them all (even if not using them all) is rather careless for a device aimed at "maker"s…
Simpplicity is not reaching for a soldering iron just to get the RTC working with something else. :-) |
Andrew Conroy (370) 740 posts |
I guess the HAT Specification is designed for those users who wish just just ‘plug and play’ with their add-on boards without possible problems, and just assuming that a lot of HATs would be swapped over rather than anyone wanting to stack them. Follow the official HAT Specification and you get to officially call your board a “HAT”, which looks/sounds good but comes at the expense of usefulness! Of course, if you use one of these like I do then you get round the problem another way anyway. Plus I’d guess the majority of add-on boards don’t conform to the spec, which means you can use them together, even get one board controlled by another add-on (see my various IIC inputs which can control some of the little LED add-on boards). |
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