Hedda
Hedda
To get the equivalent SMD module from Silicon Labs then might want to look at EFR32MG1B Series 1. Ebyte's E180-ZG120A and E180-ZG120B are Zigbee 3.0 module based on EFR32MG1B SoC:...
Almost any ESP8266 development board (like a NodeMCU or a Wemos D1 Mini) with a Silicon Labs EFR32MG based Zigbee module like the Ebyte E180-ZG120B would just about be about...
FYI @SillyDay don't own a E180-ZG120B but has tried to build a firmware for it as per discussion here: https://github.com/Koenkk/zigbee-herdsman/issues/168 SillyDay GitHub repo for EFR32 firmware: https://github.com/SillyDay/EFR32
FYI, as per related request https://github.com/zigpy/zigpy/issues/405 I just learned that there is an existing ESP8266-based networked-attached Zigbee-adapter called "ZiGate Pack WiFi adapter" which has a new v2.0 firmware that archives...
FYI, @s-hadinger has now got a Sonoff ZBBridge and started reviewing the board in it (for Tasmota) - https://github.com/arendst/Tasmota/issues/8583 First signs it is the EFR32 Zigbee module it has inside...
Here is also code projects to emulate an electricity meter to to send a signal to Sparnas wireless display: https://github.com/MagnusThome/sparsnas-esp8266-01 https://github.com/MagnusThome/sparnas-raspberry
@posicat cheaper maybe but not userfriendly to those who already own an Ikea Sparnäs & have it installed. Sparnäs cheap as both transmitter & receiving display are 99 Swedish krona...
FYI; here are more detailed information information on how exactly Sparnäs work with power-meters : https://github.com/kodarn/Sparsnas @kodarn include a "LedBlinkerHelperToo" to emulate power-meter to help develop without Sparnäs. @MagnusThome have...
@Gh0stBlade Posted request on Libretro forums now too: https://forums.libretro.com/t/opentomb-tomb-raider-1-5-game-engine-open-source/10096 Libretro uses bountysource.com so they take bounty (donations) for all specific features: https://www.bountysource.com/issues/44797055-bounty-for-porting-opentomb-tomb-raider-1-5-open-source-game-engine-to-libretro
> For those who already have the module with the chip antenna, it can easily be desoldered and replaced with a piece of copper wire. Tip! With it using 2.4GHz...