- From: Futomi Hatano <futomi.hatano@newphoria.co.jp>
- Date: Thu, 15 Oct 2015 11:47:45 +0900
- To: Michael Koster <michaeljohnkoster@gmail.com>
- Cc: Drasko DRASKOVIC <drasko.draskovic@gmail.com>, Dave Raggett <dsr@w3.org>, Satoru Takagi <sa-takagi@kddi.com>, public-device-apis@w3.org, Public Web of Things IG <public-wot-ig@w3.org>, public-browserobo@w3.org, tobie@sensors.codespeaks.com
Thanks for clearly reflecting my opinion, Michael. Sorry for causing misunderstanding because of my bad english, everyone. I2C and GPIO APIs are for embedded devices such as CHIRIMEN, RPi, etc. I think that proposing these APIs is not a kind of things to be denied in the context of WoT. These APIs are just interfaces which are kicked by JavaScript locally in a device. Cheers, Futomi -- Newphoria Corporation Chief Technology Officer Futomi Hatano -- futomi.hatano@newphoria.co.jp http://www.newphoria.co.jp/ On Wed, 14 Oct 2015 18:33:24 -0700 Michael Koster <michaeljohnkoster@gmail.com> wrote: > I think I understand this, but I don’t understand where WoT fits in. > > As far as I can tell, it’s about embedded programming. The CHIRMEN board doesn’t seem to have a network connection or a display connection. > > It’s an embedded linux computer with GPIOs that runs a browser environment as an embedded programming environment. A developer writes html with embedded javascript and local GPIO and I2C javascript libraries in order to program hardware sensors and actuators which are directly connected to the board’s I/O pins. > > So basically a developer can pretend they're programming in a browser using HTML and javascript and tags and stuff when programming an embedded linux based controller. I guess you write the code using your favorite web design tool and then download it to the board, where it executes and blinks the LED. > > Am I missing something important? > > Cheers, > > Michael > > > On Oct 14, 2015, at 12:05 PM, Drasko DRASKOVIC <drasko.draskovic@gmail.com> wrote: > > > On Wed, Oct 14, 2015 at 9:00 PM, Dave Raggett <dsr@w3.org> wrote: > >> > >> On 14 Oct 2015, at 19:20, Drasko DRASKOVIC <drasko.draskovic@gmail.com> > >> wrote: > >> > >> > >> While CoAP has a browser support only in Firefox currently (via > >> Copper), MQTT support is even easier - for example via lib like this > >> https://github.com/mqttjs/MQTT.js which can send MQTT messages via > >> WebSocket. > >> > >> > >> Does this rely on a server side Web Sockets to MQTT gateway of some kind? > > > > Modern MQTT brokers contain WS support for this purpose - example: > > http://jpmens.net/2014/07/03/the-mosquitto-mqtt-broker-gets-websockets-support/ > > and https://github.com/mcollina/mosca/wiki/MQTT-over-Websockets. > > > > BR, > > Drasko > >
Received on Thursday, 15 October 2015 02:48:17 UTC