I don’t think that actually answers OP’s question. If all it does is vibrate then it doesn’t need any software. It presumably just has a single button that turns vibration on/off and maybe cycles through vibration levels. A dumb circuit without even a single chip in it could do that.
I’m just guessing here, but it’s probably for battery management and wireless charging, which are tricky problems you’re not gonna solve with a 555. I generally trust EEs to not put MCUs where they aren’t needed, so this must have been the cheapest/easiest option.
I don’t know why I’m replying this deep to play devils advocate for some stupid knife, but I could see a situation where you haven’t completed the research on optimal frequency and ship it out while that’s ongoing. Maybe the window of optimal frequency is narrow enough, or unknown enough, that it’d be difficult to calibrate a potentiometer such that the end user could find that ideal point.
I don’t think that actually answers OP’s question. If all it does is vibrate then it doesn’t need any software. It presumably just has a single button that turns vibration on/off and maybe cycles through vibration levels. A dumb circuit without even a single chip in it could do that.
Ah, but what if you want it to vibrate to the beat of your favorite song? Did you think about that?
Or in my ass?
No, it’s not a poop knife!
A vibrating poop knife might be the next big thing.
It obviously needs specific vibration settings for each food you want to cut.
And a mic and camera for some reason.
I’m just guessing here, but it’s probably for battery management and wireless charging, which are tricky problems you’re not gonna solve with a 555. I generally trust EEs to not put MCUs where they aren’t needed, so this must have been the cheapest/easiest option.
Marketing convinced the boss it needs AI, too bad engineers
Because it’s cheaper to buy a commodity chip and program it rather than get an application specific chip made.
You don’t need a chip in a vibration circuit. Hell a potentiometer is more than sufficient to give you different levels of vibration
I don’t know why I’m replying this deep to play devils advocate for some stupid knife, but I could see a situation where you haven’t completed the research on optimal frequency and ship it out while that’s ongoing. Maybe the window of optimal frequency is narrow enough, or unknown enough, that it’d be difficult to calibrate a potentiometer such that the end user could find that ideal point.
I’m not sure a knife needs to vibrate in the first place…
I’d love to see a chip less BMS for lipos.
The fuck you talking about?
Yeah, that’s what I thought.
Yeah, buddy because your specialized knowledge is the only way things work…
Seriously.
It’s in no way specialized, that’s the point.
And completely irrelevant. Circuits do not require chips to operate. And you have created a scenario to feel superior.
Fucking typical computer nerd.