Yeah, that's sort of the market that's picked it up: "I need to connect to old junk". And it would seem like a great fit, except that (as you point out) volumes are tiny and the benefit of a $1 chip vs. a $10 FPGA is high only at scale.
I just checked, and that board is $70. Here's a significantly more capable device with an ESP32 and a iCE40 FPGA which could do the same things and more for $100:
I have one and it works great, though not many people picked it up. It's actually available for $50 now, it looks like they're liquidating what they bought.
Point being: is PIO really enabling new solutions in this market? No. At best it's providing a ~30% reduction in retail price for some oddball niche applications. Is that worth the cost of spinning the masks for the chip? IMHO, no.
Yeah, that's sort of the market that's picked it up: "I need to connect to old junk". And it would seem like a great fit, except that (as you point out) volumes are tiny and the benefit of a $1 chip vs. a $10 FPGA is high only at scale.
I just checked, and that board is $70. Here's a significantly more capable device with an ESP32 and a iCE40 FPGA which could do the same things and more for $100:
https://groupgets.com/products/ice-v-wireless
I have one and it works great, though not many people picked it up. It's actually available for $50 now, it looks like they're liquidating what they bought.
Point being: is PIO really enabling new solutions in this market? No. At best it's providing a ~30% reduction in retail price for some oddball niche applications. Is that worth the cost of spinning the masks for the chip? IMHO, no.