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IoT Specialist inx Launches a Crowdfunding Campaign for the Multi-Format, Highly-Flexible WAN-4-ALL

Clever design delivers a processor module with Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5, and LoRa and a carrier board that covers a range of ecosystems.

Gareth Halfacree
19 days ago β€’ Internet of Things / HW101

No-code Internet of Things (IoT) specialist inx is crowdfunding an Espressif ESP32-S3-powered LoRa module designed to make building connected devices easier β€” and a multi-format carrier board to speed up prototyping, too: the WAN-4-ALL.

"WAN-4-ALL makes LoRaWAN more accessible and versatile than ever," claims inx director Pierre Drezet. "Supplied with pre-installed IoT firmware and no-code development tools to make sure you are productive in your first minutes of unboxing WAN-4-ALL. As well as being perfect for makers, the WAN-4-ALL module is the perfect stepping stone to commercial products as it can be provided at a low cost for integration into your custom smart products once the PoC [Proof of Concept] work is done."

The WAN-4-ALL aims to make it easier to prototype and produce IoT designs with Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and LoRa connectivity. (πŸ“Ή: inx)

The heart of the WAN-4-ALL is the "OEM Module," which combines an Espressif ESP32-S3 controller, featuring 512kB of static RAM (SRAM) and 8MB of SPI flash, with a Seeed Studio Wio-E5 Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5, and LoRa radio module β€” itself driven by a dedicated STMicroelectronics STM32WLE5JC network processor. This, the company says, contains everything you need to build smart IoT devices with short-range, high-speed, or long-range connectivity β€” and is fully supported by the Lucid no-code development platform.

For ease of prototyping and experimentation, the OEM Module can be connected into a carrier that breaks out its various features β€” and if you haven't yet settled on an ecosystem for your add-ons, you'll find almost every angle covered: the carrier includes two mikroBUS expansion slots, an Adafruit FeatherWing-compatible header, an Arduino MKR-compatible header, six Grove ports (2Γ— I2C, 2Γ— analog, 2Γ— digital), and a 40-pin general-purpose input/output (GPIO) header, along with four user-addressable push-button switches and matching LEDs.

Both the module and its breakout board are, inx promises, to be provided as open-source "with permissive attribution-only licensing terms," Drezet explains. "The inxware firmware has a similar permissive open source SDK allowing all function blocks provided to be modified, extended or ported to new hardware" β€” though, Drezet warns, the software development kit does include "proprietary elements" provided as cross-platform binary blobs.

The WAN-4-ALL is currently funding on Kickstarter, with physical rewards starting at Β£25 (around $32) for a "super early beta" carrier board and OEM module bundle, rising to Β£49 for "early bird" backers and Β£55 for the rest (around $62 and $70 respectively); hardware will begin shipping to beta backers in January next year, inx says, with the early bird hardware shipping in March and the remainder in April.

Gareth Halfacree
Freelance journalist, technical author, hacker, tinkerer, erstwhile sysadmin. For hire: freelance@halfacree.co.uk.
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