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A New Chapter for MagicMirror: The Community Takes the Lead
Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.

stronger Raspberry Pi 3 Alternatives

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Hardware
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  • M Offline
    Mykle1 Project Sponsor Module Developer @ninjabreadman
    last edited by Jan 17, 2018, 2:05 AM

    @ninjabreadman

    No, but I’ve used, and am using, old laptop boards (and one netbook) with ubuntu. They can be gotten on the cheap and come with everything you need. :-)

    Create a working config
    How to add modules

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    • C Offline
      cruunnerr
      last edited by Jan 17, 2018, 6:09 PM

      Well, i need to say that especially for me, the ability to use GPIOs is important. Unfortunately the power of the raspi’s & co is not as good as x86 systems.

      Does anyone know if it would be possible to use MagicMirror on a x86 system and uses external GPIOs? I installed an MM instance on a virtual machine running Linux. When i add a module which uses GPIOs i get errors. Is there a possibility (maybe with server-client)

      M 1 Reply Last reply Jan 17, 2018, 8:36 PM Reply Quote 0
      • E Offline
        emlowe Module Developer
        last edited by Jan 17, 2018, 6:43 PM

        You mean something like this:

        https://www.adafruit.com/product/2264

        I just did a google for “USB GPIO breakout board”

        -Earle

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        • C Offline
          cruunnerr
          last edited by cruunnerr Jan 17, 2018, 7:02 PM Jan 17, 2018, 6:55 PM

          @emlowe said in stronger Raspberry Pi 3 Alternatives:

          https://www.adafruit.com/product/2264

          do you think its just that simple? that would be great.
          The question is, if the program code or the configuration will be the same as on a RPi. Or are u need to do some complicated hacks to use the board with MM?

          edit:
          okay… i searched now, too.

          Found this:

          https://www.raspberrypi.org/blog/gpio-expander/

          what do u guys think about that?

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          • E Offline
            emlowe Module Developer
            last edited by Jan 17, 2018, 7:03 PM

            Well, adafruit has python sample code. You likely need the node FT232H module to use it from JS.

            https://www.npmjs.com/package/FT232H

            Does it actually work - I have no idea - that board is also apparently out of stock :-)

            Sample python code below

            # Import standard Python time library.
            import time
            
            # Import GPIO and FT232H modules.
            import Adafruit_GPIO as GPIO
            import Adafruit_GPIO.FT232H as FT232H
            
            # Temporarily disable the built-in FTDI serial driver on Mac & Linux platforms.
            FT232H.use_FT232H()
            
            # Create an FT232H object that grabs the first available FT232H device found.
            ft232h = FT232H.FT232H()
            
            # Configure digital inputs and outputs using the setup function.
            # Note that pin numbers 0 to 15 map to pins D0 to D7 then C0 to C7 on the board.
            ft232h.setup(7, GPIO.IN)   # Make pin D7 a digital input.
            ft232h.setup(8, GPIO.OUT)  # Make pin C0 a digital output.
            
            # Loop turning the LED on and off and reading the input state.
            print 'Press Ctrl-C to quit.'
            while True:
            	# Set pin C0 to a high level so the LED turns on.
            	ft232h.output(8, GPIO.HIGH)
            	# Sleep for 1 second.
            	time.sleep(1)
            	# Set pin C0 to a low level so the LED turns off.
            	ft232h.output(8, GPIO.LOW)
            	# Sleep for 1 second.
            	time.sleep(1)
            	# Read the input on pin D7 and print out if it's high or low.
            	level = ft232h.input(7)
            	if level == GPIO.LOW:
            		print 'Pin D7 is LOW!'
            	else:
            		print 'Pin D7 is HIGH!'
            
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            • M Offline
              Mykle1 Project Sponsor Module Developer @cruunnerr
              last edited by Jan 17, 2018, 8:36 PM

              @cruunnerr said in stronger Raspberry Pi 3 Alternatives:

              Does anyone know if it would be possible to use MagicMirror on a x86 system and uses external GPIOs?

              Well, it’s certainly possible to run MM on a x86 system. I haven’t a clue about external GPIO usage but it looks promising. For now, I use my mirror for some things and my Alexa for everything else.

              Create a working config
              How to add modules

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