Email: Password: Remember Me | Create Account (Free)

Back to Subject List

Old thread has been locked -- no new posts accepted in this thread
???
10/27/08 07:59
Read: times


 
#159374 - Yes.
Responding to: ???'s previous message
Any thoughts ??

Essentially, "SPI-compatible" means "You may have a chance of getting it to work with another SPI-compatible device, but don't count on it".

I had a project with a '51 (with SPI capability) and a serial EEPROM (also SPI-capable) ... and ended up having to bit-bang it.

List of 18 messages in thread
TopicAuthorDate
SPI is a free for all ??            01/01/70 00:00      
   Danger to use block sizes not n*8 bits            01/01/70 00:00      
      The non-standard, standard            01/01/70 00:00      
         Master is easy, slave is pure hell            01/01/70 00:00      
         control by chip select            01/01/70 00:00      
            Correct            01/01/70 00:00      
   Now you know why Philips (now NXP) ...            01/01/70 00:00      
   Yes.            01/01/70 00:00      
      What was the incompatibility?            01/01/70 00:00      
         Instruction length.            01/01/70 00:00      
            Bad knowledge of that EEPROM manufacturer            01/01/70 00:00      
               Oh the irony.            01/01/70 00:00      
                  No Analogue Irony At All            01/01/70 00:00      
                     I have company..            01/01/70 00:00      
                        Your T7            01/01/70 00:00      
                           Simple interpretation            01/01/70 00:00      
                        FTDI            01/01/70 00:00      
                           I have company            01/01/70 00:00      

Back to Subject List