I finally got a break from work, so I decided to hit the lab again to learn more about microcontrollers. A classmate asked me if I could teach him more about the PIC, so I decided to sharpen up on various peripherals of the PIC16F887 (that we weren't shown in class).
This PIC contains a program that blinks a light upon the Timer0 interrupt (with a prescaler of 256) and also interrupts upon shorting the RB0 pin (lighting up various LEDs). It's pretty simple, but it covers enough unfamiliar ground that I think should be useful to anyone still learning about the basics of microcontrollers.
Some Kind of Wizard
LWIT Electronics Student Projects blog. PFM
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Greetings! Clip-On Programmer.
To anyone that reads this, this blog has only one mission: to conquer all of humanity with the black magic that is electronics technology. I will post about interesting projects that I am undertaking as they come along.
Forget about building a dev board (with ZIF sockets) for programming microcontrollers. This morning I soldered a connector to a programmer "clip-on" tester. This means I can connect to all of my projects without having to pull out the chip from the circuit or have to build additional connections to interface with the programmer. I will also be building additional connectors for the ATmega168, and for another clip tester designed for SOIC packages.
Forget about building a dev board (with ZIF sockets) for programming microcontrollers. This morning I soldered a connector to a programmer "clip-on" tester. This means I can connect to all of my projects without having to pull out the chip from the circuit or have to build additional connections to interface with the programmer. I will also be building additional connectors for the ATmega168, and for another clip tester designed for SOIC packages.
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