picasm Member May 9, 2007 #1 Cornell University has documented 32 of their latest student microcontroller projects this year. https://instruct1.cit.cornell.edu/courses/ee476/FinalProjects/ Some look very interesting, I really like the one where they have made a USB host controller without the need for a dedicated chip. Shame they only use Atmel microcontrollers though, I suppose there is a big incentive there
Cornell University has documented 32 of their latest student microcontroller projects this year. https://instruct1.cit.cornell.edu/courses/ee476/FinalProjects/ Some look very interesting, I really like the one where they have made a USB host controller without the need for a dedicated chip. Shame they only use Atmel microcontrollers though, I suppose there is a big incentive there
H HarveyH42 Banned May 9, 2007 #2 Thanks, will check them out. Good thing I PICked the AVR series to learn microcontrollers.
Papabravo Well-Known Member May 10, 2007 #3 A plain TTL Buffer (74126) actually can drive a 15K pulldown. I had forgotten that this was possible. Way to to go guys!
A plain TTL Buffer (74126) actually can drive a 15K pulldown. I had forgotten that this was possible. Way to to go guys!
cyb0rg777 New Member May 10, 2007 #4 Great stuff .Hard to believe they built those things in one year from scratch. Look at the improvement from last year. Those projects are good too but these are great. It's not just the circuit designs either,very good ideas to start with.
Great stuff .Hard to believe they built those things in one year from scratch. Look at the improvement from last year. Those projects are good too but these are great. It's not just the circuit designs either,very good ideas to start with.