??? 10/20/06 17:08 Read: times |
#126817 - that should make it clear Responding to: ???'s previous message |
Andy posted
Another use for lots of flash (even if you're not doing code banking) is for in-application firmware updates - you load the spplication into a "spare" flash "page I posted However, if you are fiddeling with code memory schemes, consider, instead of bank switching a chameleon. This would be a very nice chip if you had to design a product that had to be backwards compatible. What I mean is a chip with (I could use 2, some may want more) code spaces and the code initially started would detect "something"and if it was the 'old' type totally switch to another 'memory page' and run as if what is in that page is ALL code WITHOUT ANY overhead after the switching. Two reasons and two explanations of the same. Erik |