<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by MindBender</i>
<br />Eaton offered me one for evaluation after my negative experience with their products, but that never got a follow-up. I have considered buying one, but I find the possibilities too limited and the price (much) too high.
As for the possibilities: What I (and you) need is 'decoupling': If a PIR sensor is triggered, I want a timer to be postponed. In a separate task I need the timer to be evaluated and if it has expired the light must be turned of. The HCB (nor many of the PC applications) offer this possibility.
As for the price: Sweex offers a broadband Ethernet router with similar hardware specifications for 23(!) Euro, complete with power adapter, booklet, box etc. I can imagine the HCB to cost 230 Euro because of the lower volume and the software engineering. But >700 Euro is far beyond my imagination. Perhaps they spent a lot of budget in developing the hardware, but that's a waste because many embedded platforms are available complementary of the hardware manufacturer.
The alternative: A Sweex router (or an Edimax if you don't want to add USB yourself) has a 175MHz MIPS32 on board and it can run Linux without any problems. On top of that it can run an Apache web server and Mr. House. It's serial interface can be connected to a CM11 X10 interface and if you're not afraid of a little soldering you can reuse it's 12 LEDs as General Purpose Input/Output pins. You could even hook up a USB CM10 instead of a serial one to make it a software-only modification. I'm working on it, but I have extremely little time. If I'm done I'll post instruction here

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Hi MindBender,
Can you give me some more info on the Sweex/Edimax rebuild.
Cheers, Willem.