Why wouldn't you just up the model of the chip? Pull off something like the minipac?
Here's a little trivia for you. The little processor in the Opti-Wiz uses the
exact same processor core, at the
exact same speed as the device you just mentioned. It just has less memory and less I/O pins. I dedicate all of it resources to handling the 3 axes, because that is all I feel it should be tasked with to do the job properly. Do you know how quickly a device must be able to scan and process the readings from a rapidly spun, high-resolution encoder wheel to keep from seeing things like backspin?
Personally, I would rather offer less expensive devices with hardware dedicated to the one task for which it was designed than try to make one chip try to do everything. It's a philosophy not everyone shares, but that's the thing about philosophies.
I got a question for you... do you code the chips yourself?
[sarcasm]
No, the cleaning lady does it between taking out the garbage and scrubbing the toilets. We get her to do the soldering on her lunch break......
[/sarcasm]
Of course I do. I also write the software to support it, design the circuit boards, source the components, solder, manage the web store, create the logos and the graphics, handle customer support and try to convey information I have learned in the last 20+ years doing these kinds of things to the good folks on these forums.
Tell me, was there a reason for this question?
RandyT