- Apr 23, 2000
- 631
- 4
- 81
Been a little out of the loop for the past couple of years on the microprocessor market, but I am wondering what my options are for microprocessors that:
1) Connect to a main server
2) Have relatively secure communication
3) Scalable
4) Relatively cheap (meaning common interfaces/protocols)
Basically I want a bunch of processors (anywhere from 10 to 1000) aggregating data, and getting commands from the server and reporting back to the server. I pretty much envision this as 18F PICs with ethernet (maybe some proprietary protocol on top of TCP/IP), all plugged into switches. I suppose wireless is easier to setup physically, but security and the number of devices worries me. All devices will get wall power too so running cables isn't a problem. Is CAN bus worth looking at or anything else? USB would be device limited.. and a pain.
I know this is very vague, but any thoughts? Anything new on the microprocessor forefront, or any other chips you have had luck with? I generally like Microchip because they have always had great support and dev kits.
Thanks!
1) Connect to a main server
2) Have relatively secure communication
3) Scalable
4) Relatively cheap (meaning common interfaces/protocols)
Basically I want a bunch of processors (anywhere from 10 to 1000) aggregating data, and getting commands from the server and reporting back to the server. I pretty much envision this as 18F PICs with ethernet (maybe some proprietary protocol on top of TCP/IP), all plugged into switches. I suppose wireless is easier to setup physically, but security and the number of devices worries me. All devices will get wall power too so running cables isn't a problem. Is CAN bus worth looking at or anything else? USB would be device limited.. and a pain.
I know this is very vague, but any thoughts? Anything new on the microprocessor forefront, or any other chips you have had luck with? I generally like Microchip because they have always had great support and dev kits.
Thanks!
