William At MyBlueRoom
New Member
A freeware virtual breadboard. Found it the other day just wanted to share the link.
https://www.virtualbreadboard.com/
https://www.virtualbreadboard.com/
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William At MyBlueRoom said:A freeware virtual breadboard. Found it the other day just wanted to share the link.
https://www.virtualbreadboard.com/
I thought gEDA was Unix only??? If so I can not run all over my other programs I need to use it
mramos1 said:Now $269 for Proton+, I will still pass If they would give me 200 lines of code in the demo (like MikroBASIC) to really use it maybe.. Or $20 for a 500 line version.. Woohoo..
gramo said:Its a development suit, not just a standalone package;
You get the most powerful version of basic designed and continually updated for both the intermediate and high-end users;
Free updates, and there are many 'addons' that allow simple interfacing with SD cards for example, I’m just touching on the basics here
A VSM (to simulate your circuits in near real time, although its only locked to certain configurations - but its damn handy anyway, and the full version is probably the most powerful VSM on the market.
In Proteus 6 Professional you can develop complete circuits with thousands of components, including digital devices running with I2C/SPI/DALLAS 1 WIRE/UART practically anything, and then throw in a few virtual terminals for real time debugging, dc/ac signals for ADC/DAC/anything, and as soon as you hit 'simulate' your circuit is as it would be in real life.
Sceadwian said:Why waste your time? Go to www.linear.com go to their downloads section and you can get ltspice for absolutely no charge
i_build_stuff said:It looks like you can get the source and compile for win32 if you want. You could also boot Linux in a virtual machine, or from a liveCD (with gEDA installed to a USB drive).
mramos1 said:Somehow it seems digital simulation is not really needed for small projects. That was my point.
BTW: ltspice is very nice.
$269 for a basic compiler (Proton) is more than I will spend.
Was this post about virtualbreadboard?
I think that went out the window when it turned out not to be free.mramos1 said:Was this post about virtualbreadboard?
That site is a bit confusing... On the main page it infers the demo version is limited to 100 lines (full ver $45), on the downloads page it appears to be free; or is demo free? If it's $45 I'd consider investing in Bascom instead, especially for the simulator.mramos1 said:Atmel AVR, see my signature. I have an STK-500 abd RVKBasic (free)..