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www.blog.montgomerie.net | ||
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ciesie.com
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| | | | | TL;DR < You can find the source code here. I used the Wii Nunchuk controller to prototype one handed controller for creating computer graphics. I used the Blue Pill board which carries a STM32F1 microcontroller with a built-in USB peripheral. That allowed me to implement it as a true USB HID (Human Interface Device) for the Windows OS. The results were disappointing. My USB HID implementation was poor. I have fixed several important bugs in another project. | |
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blog.qiqitori.com
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| | | | | [AI summary] The text describes the process of connecting a USB-HID game controller to an MSX computer using a Raspberry Pi Pico as a signal converter. The author provides detailed code and setup instructions, including handling voltage level differences and configuring the Pico's GPIO pins. They also mention challenges like system crashes when plugging in the device while the MSX is running and note that the solution works with their Hitachi MB-H2 MSX but may need adjustments for other hardware. | |
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andybrown.me.uk
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| | | | | The STM23 F042 series is ST's cheapest route into USB device programming for the F0 series of STM32 microcontrollers. In hacker-friendly units of one you can buy an STM32F042F6P6 (48Mhz, 32Kb flash... | |
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neilzone.co.uk
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| | | Neil Brown's personal blog. | ||