Difference between revisions of "Swagbadge2021 GettingStarted"
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(→My package arrived in the mail, first steps.) |
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* Take off the protective cases to reveal the screens. | * Take off the protective cases to reveal the screens. | ||
* Powering it up | * Powering it up | ||
− | ** Insert | + | ** Insert a micro USB cable into the badge and connect the other end to a USB port on your computer or USB power source. |
** A green light should glow on the rear of the board, and a title appear across the two screens. | ** A green light should glow on the rear of the board, and a title appear across the two screens. | ||
* Turning it on and off again | * Turning it on and off again |
Revision as of 04:27, 21 December 2020
Contents
Getting started with the Swagbadge
My package arrived in the mail, first steps.
- Your package should contain your badge! [insert photo here]
- Take off the protective cases to reveal the screens.
- Powering it up
- Insert a micro USB cable into the badge and connect the other end to a USB port on your computer or USB power source.
- A green light should glow on the rear of the board, and a title appear across the two screens.
- Turning it on and off again
- Plugging/unplugging it is fine. Usually the badge isn't running anything intensely enough that just unpowering it would cause a problem.
- On bootup, you should see:
- The OLED screens will display "Aiko" and a version number as a title
- It will also display something else to tell you to set up your wifi.
Getting it on your network
Safety precautions we have provided
- When using any hardware ordered off the internet, you can't be quite certain what software might be present on it. Before shipping these badges to you, we reflashed a fresh copy of MicroPython onto the Lolin32.
- The framework running on the badge is Aiko, which is open source.
- The software on the badge is available on the CCHS repository, also all open source.
- The badges are designed to communicate over MQTT - a lightweight standard for messaging on IoT devices, but we are aware of privacy considerations: you don't want anybody able to control your badge from afar. The swagbadge protocol provides support for encrypted messages.
Getting the device on your wifi - wireless
- The first time you boot your device, it won't know how to talk to your network. If it can't detect a pre-existing set of network credentials, or connect to anything it knows about, it will establish a temporary access point and prompt you to navigate to it to enter your wifi details.
- Note: Your device can only talk to a 2G network: it is not compatible with 5g.
- The screens on your badge will say:
Configure WiFi: aiko1234a12341234. Try http://192.168.4.1
- Use your phone or computer to connect to the wifi network on the badge. Its name starts with
aiko
followed by some numbers/letters. - Once you're connected to the badge, open a web browser to the IP address on the screens. Something like
http://192.168.4.1
- You'll be prompted to enter your wifi SSID and wifi password.
- Once you've saved that, the badge will restart using the credentials you've provided and it will shut down its wifi access point.
Getting the device on your wifi - commandline with mpfshell
- If setting up via the wifi AP (access point) doesn't work, you can put a configuration file onto the badge.
- You'll need to start by getting a copy of the aiko firmware, and installing mpfshell
- Note: Your device can only talk to a 2G network: it is not compatible with 5g.
- Edit aiko_engine_mp/configuration/net.py and insert the details of your SSID and password.
- use mpfshell:
mpfshell -o COM3
-
put configuration/net.py configuration/net.py
- fire up repl to view the console log
- You can now restart your device
- On bootup it should now talk to your network and you can see it on the console log.
On bootup you should now see...
Running pre-installed applications
- Pre-installed things, how to access and run them.
Extensions: Adding a SAO
- provided by others
- build your own (linky here to our docs)
Extensions: Updating the software framework
Between when we ship the board and when it arrives, there might be some changes to the software framework (Aiko). Here's how to update it. Or perhaps you're interested in writing your own applications?