Sun SPOT: what’s in the box

giugno 25th, 2007

Before jumping on the keyboard to write applications for the SPOTs, I’d like to show you what’s in the Development Kit box. It contains three SPOTs, Java Development Kit CDROM, USB cable, two brackets for fix a SPOT over a vertical surface, installation manual and safety information:

sunspot_sdk.jpg

The SPOTs in the kit are:

This is a free-range SPOT:

freerange_spot.jpg

The base station lets the PC to connect to free-range SPOTs, configure them, remotely install and run applications. Moreover, until connected to the PC (that is: until it has power to run!) it works as other SPOTs, unless for lack of sensors. The base station is able to work as gateway between the PAN network of SPOTs and the web; in other words, it allows free-range SPOTs to open HTTP connections to the Internet using the base station as access point.

I prepared this video to show you how to disassemble a SPOT and look inside it:

A free-range SPOT consist of two double-sided boards (with radio, CPU, sensors, LEDs and switches):

sunspot_battery_radio.jpg

sunspot_cpu.jpg

sunspot_switch_and_led.jpg

If you want to take a look to SPOTs, join Frontiers of Interaction III next Thursday in Milan:


Frontiers of Interaction III - July 28 - Milan

4 Responses to “Sun SPOT: what’s in the box”

  1. Fabrizio Says:

    Ho fatto vedere il tuo video a Simon Ritter della SUN…
    Ti terrą d’occhio :-)

  2. gerdavax Says:

    Wow! Che onore!

    Avremo una nuova scusa per invitare Simon in Sardegna? ;-)

  3. ulver Says:

    Molto interessante, anche per la community che sta nascendo.
    Peccato che al momento si possa acquistare solo in America….
    Aspettiamo le slide…..

  4. gerdavax Says:

    Si, e’ molto interessante. Le slide di Frontiers of Interaction saranno online a momenti, comunque gli SPOT sono solo presentati. Prometto presto maggiori dettagli sulle modalita’ di programmazione e interazione con altri device… magari ne parliamo tutti insieme ad un meeting del JMDF! :-)

Leave a Reply

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture. Click on the picture to hear an audio file of the word.
Click to hear an audio file of the anti-spam word