vote up 1 vote down star

I have a client that would like a small PIC board that plugs into a PC's USB as a dongle in HID mode. It would basically just transfer small amounts of data over RF to another device across the room. They would like the data to come from the web. ie. user clicks a link in their browser which wakes up the PIC board and begins a download to the PIC device without the need for another application to visibly popup in front of the user.

I would think this can't be done without the setting up the browser preferences and assigning a custom application to recognize the data file. The security issues with a link initiating this kind of flow of events must be too great unless I'm missing something. Has anyone done something like what I described above?

flag
How are you mixing USB and Ethernet? Something seems amiss... – Robert Nov 5 at 14:08

2 Answers

vote up 0 vote down check

Yeah that sequence of events doesn't seem too kosher. Perhaps a browser plugin or a program running on the PC that handles communication between the PIC and web would be better?

link|flag
I agree. I just read about browser plugins and NPAPI/ActiveX. The use case is most similar to clicking a link to a Word doc and having Word open it automatically. Yeah this is done with MIME types and browser preferences but ideally this could be done automatically and with as little user notification as possible. Accepting a browser plugin is fine. – realdeal Nov 6 at 15:05
Does doing a plug-in lock you in to the one particular browser you write a plug-in for? Or is there a common plug-in architecture that is supported by all browsers? – Craig McQueen Nov 9 at 0:02
vote up 1 vote down

You could write a small piece of software that runs in the background on the PC (e.g. a Windows service), and:

  • Interfaces to the PIC device via USB
  • Provides a web interface on port 80 or probably some other port, which the browser can then connect to.

If the PIC device is network connected (e.g. has an Ethernet connection, and its own IP address on the network) then the PIC device could provide a web interface to control it. I don't know how feasible it is to fit a small web server onto a PIC though--that would be a tight fit.

link|flag
I have done several projects with a PIC18F67J60 with a HTTP server and file upload. So it will fit in a PIC easily. – Robert Nov 5 at 14:05

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.