From: Joshua Hayworth (ikyxtk.esbjl@digitalinc.info)
Date: Wed Jan 08 2003 - 02:48:59 EET
Is this what your talking about?
http://home3.inet.tele.dk/frda/picasm/prog.html
Just curious,
-- Joshua
P.s. My grandfather gave me the coolest gift for christmas. It was a
copy of the ARRL Amateur Radio Handbook circa 1958. For my birthday
(January 3rd) I got a $100 gift certificate to Frys Electronics. With
that I bought the 2003 edition of the Handbook and the W5YI Technician
class (Element 2) study guide. I'm going to my first HAM Club meeting
tonight. This hobby is turning out to be really cool.
<shrug>
Just thought you guys should know... ;-)
-----Original Message-----
From: lnaxbmn@ignite.net
[mailto:xatuge.pmzhpm@zyxel.com] On Behalf Of Phil
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 08:31 PM
To: idmm@futura.net
Subject: PIC programming question
Hello All,
I'd to try my hand at PIC programming and the projects that I have in
mind are
amateur radio related so I suppose this question is not off topic.
I have some utilities (gputils) that will create the hex code, however
I'm
wondering what other people use to actually program the PIC.
An Internet search didn't reveal very many programmers for Linux. One
interesting project is called ponyprog2000. The hardware is more complex
than
a typical programmer that operates under MS Windows but it's probably
more
versatile. The software appears to be easy enough to use.
Does anyone have a favorite PIC programmer? My only interest at the
moment is
to be able to program PIC 16F84 and 16F876 chips.
-- Regards, Phil zbmj@u-paris10.fr- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-hams" in the body of a message to terhi.victor@logonet.com More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
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