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I'm interested in getting into microcontroller programming, such as PICs. I'm going to look for books, etc., but anybody done this a bunch already? I'm hoping to be able to do simple MIDI devices and other low processing demand projects.
1 responses total.
I've done some PIC work including projects that have used the 12C509, 16C63, 16C65, and 16C622. My projects have included a track 2 magnetic stripe reader, a POCSAG pager decoder, and I'm currently using a PIC in a piece of test equipment I'm designing at work. I've used both the DOS and windows based assemblers from Microchip, and I've used Microchip's windows-based simulator and Parallax's DOS-based simulator, and am more or less happy with both of them (exept that the Parallax one apparently isn't supported any more so it only knows about the older types of PICs.) I've never used the C compiler so I can't comment on it. The PICs are incredibly fun devices to use. My track 2 magnetic stripe reader used the PIC12C509, an 8-bit microcontroller in an 8-pin package. It has 41 bytes of RAM and when I was finished with my code I was counting the amount of free RAM in terms of bits, not bytes. In fact, I had one bit of free RAM. Had plenty of program space left over, though. I use a Needham's EMP-20 device programmer to burn the chips. There are less expensive ways of programming them but since I already had the device programmer I used.
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