The ESP32 is quite open, by the company, not by RE efforts. If you were under the impression that community RE was to praise for its usability, then you must be thinking of the ESP8266 or what came before it, not the ESP32.This video is not about the entire ESP32 either.
This video is about one of the ESP32's radio functions, Bluetooth.
Espressif keeps their radio stuff closed for some reason. It might be due to licensing (if they bought parts of the radio), govt regulations of some countries mandating that users can't abuse the radio, or maybe it's trade secrets they want to keep secret to keep an edge on the market.
You don't appear to know much about the ESP32 and its ecosystem. You should, if you are at all interested in electronics, microcontrollers, or "Internet of Things".
12/28/2025
at
12:46:08 PM
> If you were under the impression that community RE was to praise for its usabilityno, it's you are under some impression you imagined that came from misreading what I wrote
I'm saying "if something is popular, one would expect everything to be scrutinized already, just due to popularity".
"binary blob in the middle of open source" is doubly intriguing target that's weird that it took so long to attract attention
by NooneAtAll3
12/28/2025
at
4:11:03 PM
I don't think its a lag of attraction. If you interested in it, you quickly will realize how much of a behemoth that task really is.First you have to limit yourself to a specific radio variant, because the actual radio hardware is different on different esp32 variants.
Then you have a massive amount of things this "blobs" actually contain.
And last there is also a lot of continues movement integrating newer radio features. E.g newer BLE version standard implementation and so forth. So you play catch with actual new development.
by vollbrecht