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Raspberry Pi Forum PSOC 5LP Hat for a Raspberry Pi
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PSOC 5LP Hat for a Raspberry Pi

clem57
clem57 over 9 years ago

     I was checking Kickstarter today and found this: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/land-boards/pisoc?ref=home_recs.

The project incorporates PSOC 5LP from Cypress on a custom hat. What do you think?

 

image

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  • land-boards
    0 land-boards over 9 years ago

    I am the original designer so I have a biased opinion. Hoping maybe I can answer some of the questions/objections above.

     

    Is it worth the money?

     

    It is a bit pricey at $50 (for early backers). The PSoC chip goes (as noted) for around $7. The PCB costs a few dollars (in the under 100 volume), the connectors and hat EEPROM cost another few dollars. It costs around $10 additional to assemble and test the card. So the selling price of $50 is around 2-3x the costs. That's high if it was made in volume and purchased from China. It's not. We build them in my living room. I am going to build around 50 or so of these cards (maybe 100 of them if the Kickstarter goes well) so there's not all that much economy of scale involved. In the end I might end up with $1000 or so profit which will go into my next project.

     

    Why hook up all of the Raspberry Pi GPIO lines?

     

    Think about this one a bit. If you want an input pin connected just connect it inside the PSoC to one of the I/O pins. Same goes for output pins. Just route them through the PSoC. What about Bi-directional pins? Someone mentioned One Wire. The Pi really stinks at interfaces which have specialized timing. You get a packet in on the Ethernet and all of a sudden you are preempted - ouch. That's where the beauty of the PSOC comes in handy. The ARM processor inside the part does a great job in those situations. Try handling the timing of a chain of NeoPixels with the Pi. It's not a great bit-banger. The ARM CPU in the PSOC is great at bit-banging.

     

    Is this just a Marketing Ploy?

     

    Hardly, I'm horrible at Marketing. I just put up projects that I do for myself. If someone else made the card for $30 or $35, I'd buy it and not build it. I think an entire University class could be built around this card. Can you imagine the possibilities of breadboarding a fairly complex design with minimal breadboarding?

     

    But I can just buy the $10 Dev Kit from Cypress!

     

    Of course you can. We did too. That's what got us interested in the part to begin with. Is it a Raspberry Pi Hat or is it a breadboarding tool? If you want to do breadboards, it is just fine. If you want to build something beyond a breadboard that's another story.

     

    Where's the innovation in this project?

     

    That was a real challenge. Took me a couple of weeks of solid Engineering time to figure out just how to program a PSOC from a Raspberry Pi. You see the limitations of the Pi are the unpredictable timing. The Pi doesn't make a great bit-banging programmer. If someone else had already figured out how to program the part, I would have just used their code. Nobody did, though. Took pouring through the Application notes and the answer was there. But not easy to figure out. And what did we do with the answer? We put it up on our github site for all to see. Some clever stuff there? Surely someone else will come along and say that they would have done it better/differently. But they didn't do it. We did.

     

    Doug at Land Boards, LLC (just a guy and his sons who do stuff together).

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  • shabaz
    0 shabaz over 9 years ago in reply to land-boards

    I don't know. I think I'd feel guilty charging 2-3 times cost for something that I knew was very similar to a dev-board that was one-fifth of the cost unless there was significant value-add.

    Especially if you're targetting university classes - in that case isn't it better for them to save money and use the dev-board for a fifth of the cost?

     

    I understand that you went to effort to port a programmer to the 'Pi, but Cypress Semi created the code that it was based on. Many of us here have ported code and share it

    for free too.

     

    I still don't get why you'd connect all the Pi's I/O to your project. The reasons mentioned would all still apply even if you just connected two or three I/O between the two boards.

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  • balearicdynamics
    0 balearicdynamics over 9 years ago in reply to shabaz

    Trying to understand - but not agreeing - I think that the question is to route (if I am not wrong he means managing pass-through) the PI on the PSoC. The point is that this is an apparent benefit, as the most powerful machine (that in all my project drives the PSoC) is just the Raspnerry, not the PSoC itself.

     

    About the cost, I should say that what I have explained about the cost in my previous post is valid except the multiply factor; btw I suppose that this depends on the fact that the creator is anyway in a commercial perspective where his job (done at home if I am not wrong) is valuable and part of the product cost.

     

    Enrico

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  • shabaz
    0 shabaz over 9 years ago in reply to balearicdynamics

    Hi Enrico!

    Everyone may implement it differently I suppose, but personally I'd route it all using a few pins, e.g. SPI or UART. For example, there might be 5 million phones in London, but there are not 5 million fiber-optic cables connecting London to NY.

    I also get the time is valuable issue, but (personally, I don't expect others to feel the same way) I don't like projects that have a risk that others could be unaware that near-similar functionality products are available at far lower cost. It is the same reason I dislike supermarkets that offer a 500gm bar of soap at a higher cost than two 250gm bars of soap, i.e. relying on people not noticing, and the people that are affected the most are those who are poor at sums. I'm not saying that is occurring here intentionally, it is just an example. Supermarkets do it intentionally as far as I am concerned.

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  • land-boards
    0 land-boards over 9 years ago in reply to shabaz

    University classes often use National Instruments hardware. They are way more expensive than this solution. This is not what we are marketing to. If it was we would have tried to reach that market. I give it as an example since I have a son at University in Electronic Engineering and the hardware they use is far more primitive and expensive and much less state of the art than this.

     

    I am not hoping that others don't see the breadboard/dev kit that Cypress offers. I am hoping that they do and want something that is married to their Raspberry Pi in a way that doesn't require a bunch of messy wiring and helps move them a step closer to a product and away from a breadboard. Our motto is "taking people beyond breadboards". Yes you could solder the pins on a Cypress Dev module and use a breadboard and for some who just wanted to breadboard something get close enough for someone who is playing around with a breadboard. And, it's still a breadboard.

     

    Now try the next step. Take the Bill of Materials for the Cypress Dev module and calculate the cost it would take YOU to produce that card. What do the two chips cost? What does the PCB, the connectors, etc go for? Cypress has a great price on the dev kit hoping that people will use it to develop an embedded product. You can't reproduce the Cypress Dev kit at 3-4 times the price. Great deal for the developer who likes breadboards. Not good for a real deployable product.

     

    So where, other than the breadboard, is there a comparable product that is near the cost? The Sparkfun PSOC card is $50 and it's claim to fame is that it has Arduino headers.

     

    Doug at Land Boards

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  • land-boards
    0 land-boards over 9 years ago in reply to shabaz

    University classes often use National Instruments hardware. They are way more expensive than this solution. This is not what we are marketing to. If it was we would have tried to reach that market. I give it as an example since I have a son at University in Electronic Engineering and the hardware they use is far more primitive and expensive and much less state of the art than this.

     

    I am not hoping that others don't see the breadboard/dev kit that Cypress offers. I am hoping that they do and want something that is married to their Raspberry Pi in a way that doesn't require a bunch of messy wiring and helps move them a step closer to a product and away from a breadboard. Our motto is "taking people beyond breadboards". Yes you could solder the pins on a Cypress Dev module and use a breadboard and for some who just wanted to breadboard something get close enough for someone who is playing around with a breadboard. And, it's still a breadboard.

     

    Now try the next step. Take the Bill of Materials for the Cypress Dev module and calculate the cost it would take YOU to produce that card. What do the two chips cost? What does the PCB, the connectors, etc go for? Cypress has a great price on the dev kit hoping that people will use it to develop an embedded product. You can't reproduce the Cypress Dev kit at 3-4 times the price. Great deal for the developer who likes breadboards. Not good for a real deployable product.

     

    So where, other than the breadboard, is there a comparable product that is near the cost? The Sparkfun PSOC card is $50 and it's claim to fame is that it has Arduino headers.

     

    Doug at Land Boards

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