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ciesie.com | ||
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www.blog.montgomerie.net
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| | | | | In this series of posts, I'm attempting to make a Dual Shock to Switch controller adapter. It will plug into the Switch Dock's USB port. This is a bit of an interlude from actually working on the project: in this post, I put a serial bootloader onto the ATmega8A I'm using, to make development more efficient. | |
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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. It's 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 miscellaneous pins CH340 USB to serial chip 1602 display has 2 lines of 16 characters, each 5x8 pixels 12864 dot matrix display has a resolution of 128x64 pixels, hence the name | |
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bikerglen.com
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| | | | | [AI summary] A detailed electronics project blog entry describing the design, coding, and 3D printing of a USB-controlled RGB LED device using a PIC microcontroller and an APA106 driver. | |
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guy.carpenter.id.au
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| | | [AI summary] The author describes creating a simple analog bandwidth meter using an Arduino, stepper motors, and custom wiring to gather live network data. | ||