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by BillinghamJ 4052 days ago
Also a key factor may have been the time required to get their own stuff certified vs using off the shelf stuff.
1 comments

A lot of people prototyping in the IoT space are using the precertified modules.

There's not much more to it: the transmitter is already soldered to a small piece of PCB but has the antenna and necessary tuned discretes on there and ready to go. Doesn't add much to the cost: like BillinghamJ says it's the certification time and cost that's not really worth the trouble if you can just amortize it into the cost of the module.

The cost comes from adding another company to the process - the module maker.

But sure, at this stage it might not be worth it , maybe later.

Hardly a concern anymore. These are just line items on a bill of materials now:

http://www.digikey.com/product-detail/en/450-0103C/450-0103C...

$7.8 is pretty expensive when you can get a bluetooth mcu(in volume, from dialog i think) for $1.
Like we said earlier, you can choose between a raw chip (like the Dialog) and handle the antenna design and all the various governmental certifications and testing yourself ($$$)..or you can buy a precertified module that drops in and you're ready to go.

It depends what you can afford and what each path will save you in the long run.