Pls dont worry mr Brandon

Well, there's a reason for that. 1) People who are *really* productive aren't even posting here,

2) they're worrying about their own problems. 3) Competing with you isn't one of them.

#2 and #3 dont "connect"

4 ) In fact, such people would describe competing with you as a pointless waste of their time. Sounds like more Brandon "worry" .....

But I'm happy to get the occasionally useful idea about ASM code from you. That's time effective.

Cheers, Brandon Van Every

______________________________________________________

Well , alls well that ends well , He says he's "happy" ..... But it cud be fleeting , as i dont see him producing nor competing ...

Now back to work ... We will freely give our ideas to help others ... I am bulding an ARM-9 PC replacement . It will do everything faster and easier than PC , and on battery power ..

First is PSRAM , its SDRAM on a budget . They limited in CMOS cause it takes 2 and when you have 2 of anything , no work gets done .... If you want somethin done , you must do it alone ..

The only problem is t takes 70 Microamps instead of 5 , to hold data . No big deal as all logic , today burns same power , from TTL ,HC ,CMOS .... 2 to 4 Mbyte is very low cost PSRAM ... I dont think it showed up in common NoteBooks yet . WXP hybernate would be nice ..

I will only boot my ARM once a week , cause when i turn it off , PSRAM safes all system software .

I wont copy anyones s/w . I will create all new . ARM has 128kbyte NOR-Parallel FLASH loader . I will not use it much , my loader will be in PSRAM , for quick developement .. I will be creating a voice input PC . It will mix Voice clips with digital "indexs" . The indexs allow kernel to search voice fragments fast , put them together and talk to you . Whats been missing to date , is a kernel smart enuf to "speak" to you .

Atmel has the best Docs on ARM , clear , just in time subjects !!

Reply to
werty
Loading thread data ...

ElectronDepot website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.