The 1100 and 1150 do not follow the 15.4 spec at the physical layer. Also, Microchip's release can barely be called "ZigBee". On the very first page they say:
"Version 1.0 of the Microchip Stack contains the following limitations. Please note that MIcrochip is planning to add new features as time progresses. Refer to the source code version log file (version.log) for current limitations. • Not ZigBee protocol-compliant • No cluster and peer-to-peer network support • No security and access control capabilities • No router functionality • Does not provide standard profiles; however, it contains all necessary primitive functions to create profiles • Does not support one-to-many bindings" In other words, it doesn't do very much at all. -Joe (moved to tinyos-users, since it doesn't deal with core tinyos module development) On 6/23/05, Neil Hancock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Circuit Cellar July has a great article on Zigbee/microchip kit. > It references microchip AN695 where there is a good discussion on 802.15.4 > and Zigbee - and what microchip has implemented of Zigbee protocol 1.0 - > which is available for download. They are using 2.4Ghz CC2420 from Chipcon > http://ww1.microchip.com/downloads/en/AppNotes/00965a.pdf > > I also noticed that ChipCon have produced two new 900Mhz devices in 16pin > and 20pin devices - CC1100 and CC1150 > Is anybody working on a 900Mhz 802.15.4 compatible mac for these? > They are I believe register compatible with the CC2420 line, so it may be > reasonably easy to interface to. > > ~Neil > > > _______________________________________________ > Tinyos-devel mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > https://mail.millennium.berkeley.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tinyos-devel > _______________________________________________ Tinyos-users mailing list Tinyos-users@Millennium.Berkeley.EDU https://mail.millennium.berkeley.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tinyos-users