When you want to play around with a new technology, do you jump straight to production machinery? Nope. Nothing beats a simplified model as proof of concept. And the only thing better than a good proof of concept is an amusing proof of concept. In that spirit [Eric Tsai], alias [electronichamsters], built the world’s most complicated electronic gingerbread house this Christmas, because a home-automated gingerbread house is still simpler than a home-automated home.
Yeah, there are blinky lights and it’s all controlled by his smartphone. That’s just the basics. The crux of the demo, however, is the Bluetooth-to-MQTT gateway that he built along the way. A Raspberry Pi with a BTLE radio receives local data from BTLE sensors and pushes them off to an MQTT server, where they can in principle be read from anywhere in the world. If you’ve tried to network battery-powered ESP8266 nodes, you know that battery life is the Achilles heel. Swapping over to BTLE for the radio layer makes a lot of sense.
If you’re thinking that you’ve seen this before, maybe you’re thinking of [electronichamsters]’s previous feat of home-automation and cardboard, which is also great fun. If a web search with the keywords “IoT” and “hamsters” is what brought you here: Hackaday aims to please.
“Swapping over to BTLE for the radio layer makes a lot of sense.”
IF your house is the size of a gingerbred house, then yes. Anything bigger, and BLE is useless
Someone’s not keeping up with technology, it seems.