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Zero - G CONNECTING THE INTERNET OF THINGS. Introduction to Zero -G.

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Presentation on theme: "Zero - G CONNECTING THE INTERNET OF THINGS. Introduction to Zero -G."— Presentation transcript:

1 Zero - G CONNECTING THE INTERNET OF THINGS

2 Introduction to Zero -G

3 Connect your embedded system products to the Wireless fidelity or Wi-Fi Connect to a host Microcontroller via a SPI serial interface. Use minimal resouce to run. Easy to use and installation and cost-effective

4 Introduction to Zero -G Software and hardware incorporate the Microchip TCP/IP networking stack Compatible with 8/16/32-bit product families PIC18®, PIC24®, PIC32® and dsPIC Development kits consist of Microchip development tools and software, ZeroG drivers and example application code

5 Introduction to Zero -G Power-saving modes are optimized for long battery life. Battery life lasts as long as 10 years for "once-a-day-wake-up" Wireless architecture optimized for applications with low duty cycles and low bandwidth The chip automatically goes on standby in between receive and transmit sessions, along with a "fast wake-up" call at the receipt of packet.  The Wi-Fi I/O automatically reduces power without intervention from host MCU No-host polling allows the host MCU to shut down while the chip remains active  The chip wakes up the host MCU at the receipt of data packets In many applications, the Wi-Fi I/O does not require the addition of external memory or an operating system, reducing overall system power consumption.

6 Introduction to Zero -G On-chip hardware security accelerators for WEP/WPA/WPA2 reduce memory footprint and offloads host processor cycles On-chip MAC layer reduces cycles done by host processor No external memory required to run the Wi-Fi I/O. The host RAM requirement is as little as 2.8kB The Easy-Fi[tm] suite includes a very small and easily ported driver with a footprint that uses as little as a few hundred bytes of RAM from a host microcontroller, and less than 10kB of ROM. The driver includes a comprehensive suite of commands that allow it to easily run in small or no OS systems.

7 Introduction to Zero -G Supports low-cost 8-bit microcontrollers. ZeroG also support systems that use 16- or 32-bit MCUs. Add Wi-Fi without adding an OS and support an already existing OS No additional memory to integrate Wi-Fi Production modules will be shipped with certification from FCC, Japan and Canadian regulatory bodies across a variety of antenna configurations. Pre-scan data that is required for ETSI certification will also be available.

8 Introduction to Zero -G Supports low-cost 8-bit microcontrollers. ZeroG also support systems that use 16- or 32-bit MCUs. Add Wi-Fi without adding an OS and support an already existing OS No additional memory to integrate Wi-Fi Production modules will be shipped with certification from FCC, Japan and Canadian regulatory bodies across a variety of antenna configurations. Pre-scan data that is required for ETSI certification will also be available.


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