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www.xjtag.com | ||
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jborza.com
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| | | | | Over a month ago I bought an Altera Cyclone IV board from a local seller, it seems to be listed on Aliexpress as well. Its marked as A-C4E6E10, and features: Altera Cyclone IV EP4CE6E22C8 FPGA chip with 6272 logic elements, 270 Kbits of memory 8-digit seven-segment LCD display 8 position DIP switch VGA output PS/2 input port (comes in handy to try out keyboard processing) buzzer a couple of push buttons a handful of IO pins, some of which can be used as a connector for a 1602/12864 display and 22 miscell... | |
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tomscii.sig7.se
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| | | | | [AI summary] This is a detailed account of the development and construction of a DCF77-controlled clock with additional features like temperature and humidity sensing. The author describes the design process, hardware components, and software implementation, including the use of a simulator for development. The project includes a bill of materials, cost analysis, and future improvements. The source code and hardware design are shared under an open license. | |
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andybrown.me.uk
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| | | | | Regular readers of this blog will have already seen the article that I published about 4 months ago where I attempted to reverse engineer a voltage regulator module originally designed to fit into ... | |
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www.henryleach.com
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| | | Five years ago I revived an old HP Stream 11 as a simple travel laptop with Debian Linux. That install is now pretty old, and the laptop's pitiful 2GB of RAM struggles more and more with websites; so it's time for a refresh. Instead of just installing another Linux distribution I thought I'd try something a little different. Since it's #OctOpenBsd, and I have to admit that I've been BSD-curious for a while, this is a good excuse to give OpenBSD a try. | ||