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المحتوى المقدم من Michai Ramakers. يتم تحميل جميع محتويات البودكاست بما في ذلك الحلقات والرسومات وأوصاف البودكاست وتقديمها مباشرة بواسطة Michai Ramakers أو شريك منصة البودكاست الخاص بهم. إذا كنت تعتقد أن شخصًا ما يستخدم عملك المحمي بحقوق الطبع والنشر دون إذنك، فيمكنك اتباع العملية الموضحة هنا https://ar.player.fm/legal.
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1 Spilling the Tea on Cross Culture Comedy: Jesse Appell’s Journey in China 29:42
29:42
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In this episode, comedian and tea enthusiast Jesse Appell of Jesse's Teahouse takes us on a journey from studying Chinese comedy to building an online tea business. He shares how navigating different cultures shaped his perspective on laughter, authenticity, and community. From mastering traditional Chinese cross-talk comedy to reinventing himself after a life-changing move, Jesse and host Brian Lowery discuss adaptation and the unexpected paths that bring meaning to our lives. For more on Jesse, visit jessesteahouse.com and for more on Brian and the podcast go to brianloweryphd.com.…
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وسم كل الحلقات كغير/(كـ)مشغلة
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المحتوى المقدم من Michai Ramakers. يتم تحميل جميع محتويات البودكاست بما في ذلك الحلقات والرسومات وأوصاف البودكاست وتقديمها مباشرة بواسطة Michai Ramakers أو شريك منصة البودكاست الخاص بهم. إذا كنت تعتقد أن شخصًا ما يستخدم عملك المحمي بحقوق الطبع والنشر دون إذنك، فيمكنك اتباع العملية الموضحة هنا https://ar.player.fm/legal.
A (mostly un-cohosted) podcast where we talk about progress - or lack thereof - of hobby-projects, mostly related to software, electronics or mechanical engineering.
…
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46 حلقات
وسم كل الحلقات كغير/(كـ)مشغلة
Manage series 1946773
المحتوى المقدم من Michai Ramakers. يتم تحميل جميع محتويات البودكاست بما في ذلك الحلقات والرسومات وأوصاف البودكاست وتقديمها مباشرة بواسطة Michai Ramakers أو شريك منصة البودكاست الخاص بهم. إذا كنت تعتقد أن شخصًا ما يستخدم عملك المحمي بحقوق الطبع والنشر دون إذنك، فيمكنك اتباع العملية الموضحة هنا https://ar.player.fm/legal.
A (mostly un-cohosted) podcast where we talk about progress - or lack thereof - of hobby-projects, mostly related to software, electronics or mechanical engineering.
…
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46 حلقات
كل الحلقات
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1 episode 45: glucometer, fuel consumption and vacuum cleaner 31:28
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(Michai is too lazy to make shownotes now, check again later. :-)
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1 episode 44: DMX512, ground reference and LED decoration stuff 24:15
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Hi, and an extremely good 2021 to all of you. We start off this brand new year talking about some totally unrelated and slightly more related new year's resolutions, a miniscule car fix, and glueing with a 3D printing pen. All in not much more detail than stated here. Continuing on last episode's VGA generator board, I added a DMX512 interface as suggested by some people - thank you for the idea. I found Q Light Controller Plus (qlcplus) a nice and so far solid piece of software for controlling DMX devices from a laptop + USB/RS485 converter cable. A potential issue (or at least in my head) when making interlinked devices like these, is potentially different ground-potentials depending on which power outlets you use to power networked your device. (See what I did there?) We talk a bit about how to guesstimate the possible magnitude of this difference. Just for fun I made an xmas LED star-shaped decoration using an existing DIY LED driver board. Reuse everything, recycle success. Also, made a modular transparant acrylic home LED decoration: shine light into the edge of an engraved piece of acrylic. Of course there was failure, this time in the form of hygroscopic LEDs + laziness + oven = damage. Finally, I made a small power switch PCB, to be placed in between USB power source and USB device: automatically switch the device off when the environment goes dark. And remember: if YOU want to make this podcast suck less, please send comments, rants, complaints, threats and/or praise. :-) Relevant links: Generic info on stray garbage and some cleanup initiatives (or Dutch version ). Q Light Controller Plus : software for controlling DMX512 devices. The USB-to-RS485 cable I happen to use: USB-RS485-WE . Video of DMX512 VGA generator in action Tweet (*sigh*...) of star-shaped LED xmas decoration. Another tweet (*groan*...) of engraved acrylic LED decoration. Pics of things talked about: DMX512 VGA generator boards. Engraved acrylic LED decoration PCB in action. ...in its base, open... ...and closed up. LDR USB power switch board... ...and schematic.…
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1 episode 43: DMM probes, laundry fix and light-hangout 11:06
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Welcome to a pretty boring episode - just as you're used to by now! Prepare yourself for epic or less epic talk about a mains test jig that proved very useful, some awesome Probe Master DMM probes well worth the money, and both me and occasional cohost Domen fixing household stuff, and the subtle psychology of starting a repair. Homebrew-wise, the only thing I made was a smooth green LED under-plant decoration. For fun, I visited an informal light-art hangout and talked about adding DMX512 to my VGA generator board. Relevant links: a potato quality animated GIF of the green plant-decoration LED thing (on Twitter) the Probe Master DMM probes that I got - they are excellent Wikipedia's entry on DMX512 stage-gear control network Pics of things discussed: The test-jig from episode 41. Clumsily made LED strip using paper, glue and cursewords... ...and a simple PWM/MOSFET driver to control 3 such strips. Let there be Light, and let there be a Plant! Domen's epic Fireplace Fix: worn out film cap.…
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1 episode 42: exploding cap, 3D-printing and planet decoration 17:53
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The thrilling tale of 4 months of doing pretty much nothing interesting is coming to a podcast near you today! After hearing about the hilarious exploding electrolytic, we continue with some lame or slightly-less-lame tools one can just buy off-the-shelf: using H-field probes for injecting magnetic fields into a PCB, the Aim-TTi I-prober 520 for measuring magnetic fields and current, and a simple but superhandy USB power meter. (I guess it's just a matter of time before all this deteriorates into an unboxing-podcast...) Various IRL events were canceled, so a YT livestream from a friend of mine got me thinking about 3D printing again. I settled on using a commercial 3D printing-service instead of DIY, and that suits me fine for now. This episode lists some criteria that may help you trying to decide between using a printing-service or getting your own printer, and if so, which printing-method suits you best. Lo and behold, I actually made something as well: a LED planet decoration thing using 3D printed "planet" and acrylic rings around it, that light up when LEDs shine onto them. For simulating visual effects, I tried and liked the Cairo 2D graphics library (for C). Links in order of appearance: product page about Beehive EMC probes Aim-TTi I-prober 520: product page and reviews on EEVblog or Mike's Electric Stuff (YT) one minute of PCB reflow inside my vapour phase oven And some fluffy pics: QCAD: 2D cross section of planet decoration's "planet sphere". The shape itself, and dimensions therein ("A", "B" etc.) can be read and used by OpenSCAD (3D) for extrusion. Pretty cool. OpenSCAD: extruded 3D shape, resulting from rotating the 2D cross section 360 degrees. A transparent engraved disk of acrylic fits between the 2 halves of the sphere. Planet decoration in action. (laptop shown, to get an impression of the size of the decoration) A piece of LEDstrip sitting snugly inside the bottom half of the planet-sphere in the center, shining outwards into the transparent acrylic sheet. LED driver, old board with flaws... ...and new version, with fewer flaws. You DESERVE one of these if you make USB-powered crap. Shoot your zapper at uranus! A dirty mind is a joy forever, and so is having a NES.…
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1 episode 41: oversized test-jig, spiky LED ball and knowing your equipment 18:34
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In this time of global turmoil, the CBA Podcast once again proves to be your one-stop source of distraction and meh-grade information. We start off by a quick list of how to keep busy in a sort of useful way, followed by a short talk about a 230 Vac test-jig and designing for test-jig repairability. Already mentioned in a previous episode, I finally got around to building a digital driver box consisting of push/pull FET and open-drain drivers for a low-voltage digital input-signal. And that's not the only thing that got finished: I also got around to make mechanics and software for a spiky icicle LED ball decoration thing, which worked out quite well. A fuzzy talk about getting to know your electronics equipment more intimately concludes this episode. If you are looking for useful things to do there, perhaps this is worth a shot. Relevant links: the ongoing RetroChallenge 2020/04 lasts until May, and is now hosted by Mark Sherman please leave 5G towers alone, and instead read Wikipedia's article on wireless device radiation and health some podcasts I listen(ed) to, in random order: Eaten By A Grue (Carrington Vanston & Kevin Savetz), about Infocom text adventures (even if you never play(ed) those, like myself) DoubleTake (Carrington Vanston & Shari Creamer), where 2 people review 1 mystery movie each Henry & Heidi Podcast (Henry Rollins & Heidi May), true stories from the past. Most have to do with music/punkrock, but probably accessible if you're not 100% into that. SledgeCast (Gerry something and Iain something), talking about "Sledge Hammer!" TV-episodes, one each episode. I binge-listened to these while driving to Hannover and back. The Amp Hour (Dave Jones & Chris Gammell), about electronic engineering. Occasionally have interviews that go off on a tangent, which I like. Rationally Speaking (Julia Galef), about the borderlands between reason and nonsense (unquote). For some reason I can't listen to this while driving, but while walking on a treadmill everything's fine. Go figure. Damn Interesting Podcasts (Alan Bellows), true stories, told in fitting atmosphere. Creepy. Weird. Retro Computing Roundtable (Paul Hagstrom, Earl Evans, Carrington Vanston, Michael Mulhern, etc etc) about retrocomputing Welcome to Night Vale (Joseph Fink, Jeffrey Cranor and others), imaginary weird reports about an imaginary desert town. Recommended to me, I like it, haven't heard more than the first few episodes, and as with Rationally Speaking, I can't seem to listen to this while driving. :-) Joe Rogan Experience (Joe Rogan and guests). Sit down for an hour or two to get to hear about people you might not even have considered otherwise. Or skip to the next episode, of course. You Don't Know Flack (Rob O'Hara), telling stories about his own life. This guy can really tell a story, very funny and entertaining, even if you're not really into the subject at hand. Multiple Sadness (Rob O'Hara), about B-movies that are so bad they're good. Very funny and entertaining. video of my LED icicle spike ball decoration on YT video of Pintek DP-25 differential probe weirdness on YT Some pics of the things mentioned in this episode: 230 Vac test-jig, using DIN-rail components and a big block of MDF wood digital driver/amplifier box, innards LED icicle ball, innards. The small PCB is an AVR micro and 2 16-channel constant current LED-drivers. painted with acrylic paint and spraypaint. Should probably just have 3D-printed this in the first place... LED icicle ball, full brightness, sitting on desk…
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1 episode 40: xmas smoothness, deadlifts and resistive load 25:29
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1 episode 39: crossing borders, intensity curves and anti-theft socks 17:52
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4.5 months is still not enough to make you forget this podcast, is it? (And also, sorry about the long gap.) Another mixed bag as usual. 2 meetups with the CBA Quality Team for some Quality Time. Eindhoven Hackerspace Hackalot moved to a new location, and I put some LED decorative stuff there, making use of a light intensity curve for a better visual result. Furthermore, a trip down memory lane with an old elevator mock-up project, tests with 2 potting-materials, a hot glue meltdown, and taking a look inside an older anti-theft clothes tag. video of Weekend Of Science (Weekend van de Wetenschap) solder-yourself kit video of LED-effect at Hackalot hackerspace (Eindhoven, NL) video of an old elevator mock-up project random info about perceived vs measured light intensity the polyurethane potting compound I used for waterproofing RetroChallenge 2019/10 Inside the anti-theft tag: At the bottom right is the mechanical lock. A pin is locked inside the brass-coloured cylinder by metal balls. Applying magnetic force will unlock it (although I didn't try here). No RFID with this one, just an LC tank circuit. I think these were similar tags they already used when I was a tiny kid.…
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1 episode 38: LEDstrip fun, rand, and voltage drops 12:45
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Hi there! Thanks for tuning in (or reading this text and then deciding not to tune in at all). Another episode with a mixed bag of semi-interesting topics. Thanks for the feedback - the inter-segment jingle will be a bit less loud from now on. Poor ears. We start off by counting pass & fail on this year's new year's resolutions, followed by mentioning a small inline PCB for driving LED-strips and so on. The PCB was used for 2 light effects so far - links to videos of both are given below. Ran into a "gotcha" when dealing with LED-effects: intelligent LEDs stuck in "full brightness" mode, causing the supply to shit itself and the system to become unresponsive. (Quickfix: small delay between boot and start-of-effect at power-on.) For the LED-effects, I measured rand() execution times (avr-gcc, avr-libc, ATmega168 @ 8 MHz) and was pleasantly surprised by its speed and predictability. Will use again. Finally, some fuzzy guesstimates / measurements about what kind of voltage drop to expect when running current through long cables. Relevant links: video of wallclock with WS2812 strip at home ...and one of a coffee table at Hackalot (Eindhoven, NL) Maker Faire Eindhoven on 28 & 29 September. Applications run (for now) until 31 July. Snapshot of my inline PCB:…
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1 episode 37: past events, lasercutting and fear of breaking the rope 18:03
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You thought that we finally learned from our mistakes and abandoned this podcast, and you thought wrong. Once again it's time to lower your standards, and enjoy a new episode of the CBA Podcast. We start with some PCB failures and flaws, followed by a very brief review of the Hackalot lasercutter & vinylcutter workshop. We attended T-DOSE, which is a Dutch open source event hosted in Eindhoven. Then for something slightly out of the ordinary, we talk about back-of-envelope calculations about whether a climbing-rope can actually break if I fall. (Spoiler alert: it cannot.) Some clarifications and errata about this climbing-rope segment: To calculate maximum force on the rope, I used the harmonic oscillator formula given here , where the actual force is calculated from fall factor, mass of object, but also the rope's rated impact force. (I forgot to mention that). Also, I made an error: I mentioned a maximum actual force of approximately 85% the rope's rated impact force, but this is in fact less than 70% - nice. For those special people who like this: standard EN 892 deals with dynamic ropes like the one discussed, and EN12277 deals with harnesses ("belts"). My harness is tested with a sustained load of 15 kN. The type of carabiner I use is rated for 27 kN load. Finally, some relevant links: Hackalot (Eindhoven, NL) where a lasercutter and vinylcutter live T-DOSE Open Source Software event (Eindhoven, NL) Wikipedia: fall factor and dynamic rope Neoliet indoor sportclimbing (Eindhoven, NL)…
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1 episode 36: triple screw-up, LED lamp biopsy and bodyfat measurement 16:08
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After more than 1 month of laziness, let's kickstart this episode with some failures and apologies. Next up is a summary of Hackalot's part in the Open Hackerspace Day 2019, and a teardown of a cheap and somewhat boring Aldi 230 Vac LED lamp. Finally, some very-voodoo and somewhat-less-voodoo methods of measuring the percentage of bodyfat in humans are briefly discussed. Links to topics discussed: RetroChallenge RC2019/03 Hackalot hackerspace in Eindhoven participated in International Open Hackerspaces Day (Dutch) generic Wikipedia info on bodyfat percentage and ways to measure/guesstimate it Eleshop organises a Rigol Experience Day (Dutch), 28 May HCC!Retro meeting (Dutch), 25 May Maker Faire Berlin , 18/19 May Here's the front and back (or back and front) of the 230 Vac Aldi LED-bulb's PCB: ...and here's what a scraped-off LED looks like under the hood: You saw it here first, folks.…
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1 episode 35: home sensors, disco LED hack and airplanes 19:08
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After 5 weeks or so, we're finally back! You'd think this episode is filled with 5 weeks worth of exciting techie stuff, but don't get your hopes up yet. Because it's not. Domen joins in to talk about his experiments with home automation, and a sowing exhibition lacking electronics and software. Furthermore, we talk about a disco LED box hack, and briefly list the difference between WS2812 and WS2813 intelligent LED. Relevant links: push sensordata to cloud for visualisation and retrieval: simple (free, up to 10 sensors, 1 datapoint/minute, 1 month history): https://io.adafruit.com/ https://pushdata.io/ https://thingspeak.com/ more advanced, for sensors and actuators, with more complex config: https://www.home-assistant.io/ Maker Faire Ruhr (Dortmund, Germany), 23 and 24 March RetroChallenge 2019/03 Screenshot of temperature monitoring in action (from https://io.adafruit.com/ ): Some pics of the disco LED box hack (take out innards, glue WS2812 strip into a matrix shape, and insert at back wall of box): (video would be nice, but is not yet done - remember, we're lazy around here.)…
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1 episode 34: Rust, coroutines and cohosting 20:52
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Finally, the "we" in announcements doesn't just mean the royal we / majestic plural, but there's an actual co-host! Introduction is in the audio contents, so I guess you'll just have to listen. We talk about first contact with the Rust programming language, coroutines for implementing lightweight tasks/threads, various smaller topics and some upcoming events. Links: Rust programming language: Discover the world of microcontrollers through Rust! The Embedded Rust Book LLVM Intermediate representation Coroutines / protothreads: Coroutines and simpler protothreads for building stackless cooperative tasks Protothreads under the hood: Duff's device or GCC's computed goto convoluted example : 6502 asm + Tcl = protothreads short video of VGA generator board in action RetroChallenge 2019/03 (whole month of March) is open Maker Faire Ruhr (DASA, Dortmund, DE): 23+24 March HCC!retro meeting (Bilthoven, NL): 16 March Here's a code snippet hopefully illustrating what I called "coroutines" and should probably have been called "protothreads". Function "print_2nd_word" is a protothread. It can be called repeatedly passing a character each time. Only the 2nd word is printed, one character at a time. void print_2nd_word( char c ) { CR_BEGIN; while ( c != ' ' ) CR_YIELD; CR_YIELD; // skip space while ( c != ' ' ) { putchar( c ); CR_YIELD; } } To do this, the function keeps track of where it exited last time it was called, using a number of macros: #define CR_BEGIN static void *jmp = &&lbl_crstart; goto *jmp; lbl_crstart: ( void )jmp; #define CR_YIELD do { jmp = &&GLUE( lbl, __LINE__ ); return; GLUE( lbl, __LINE__ ): ( void )jmp; } while ( 0 ) "CR_BEGIN" is basically setup-code. "CR_YIELD" is the simplest primitive in this context, and does: exit the protothread function, and resume at this point next time it's called . More advanced macros - e.g. to repeatedly wait for an event - can be built on top of, or in the same way as "CR_YIELD". Note that these macros use GCC's "computed gotos" (i.e. take the address of a C label, and jump to that address using "goto"). Here's an implementation of both macros using ANSI C: #define CR_BEGIN static int cr_st = 0; switch( cr_st ) { case 0: ; #define CR_YIELD do { cr_st = __LINE__; return; case __LINE__: ; } while( 0 ) #define CR_END CR_YIELD; } (In this case, an additional macro "CR_END" is necessary as glue to conform to C syntax/nesting.) Funfact: it's a bit of a PITA to add sourcecode to this page .…
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1 episode 33: new year's resolutions, SD-card interfacing and programming-meeting 11:19
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HNY2019! Not a whole lot of stuff to talk about, so this is quite a short episode. You're welcome. After some fluffy and unrelated list of New Year's Resolutions, we talk about progress for a decorative VGA generator device w.r.t. mechanics and software. I had never been to the monthly HCC!programmeren meeting, so let's talk a bit about that a bit as well, and about ways to stimulate collaboration within a group of likeminded people. Bonus Funfact: I tried to destroy the Bluetooth interface of a headphone I bought last time, and now I'm happy I failed - BT is perhaps nice after all. VGA generator device with "enclosure", front and back: Nicely aligned batch of these:…
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1 episode 32: a lying oscilloscope, TV repair attitude and VGA generation 18:22
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Apologies for the apparently low volume and low tone of voice - I think someone might have been tired. This episode discusses ongoing PCB failures, oscilloscope overdrive recovery, a BT-enabled headphone that would just keep connecting, some local events (GLOW, Awesome Space repair day, and the HCC Retro quarterly meeting). Finally, an experiment gone out of control resulted in a small PCB for generating colour effects for 4 connected VGA monitors. Ruby is used as "effect description language". Links: EEVblog forum post on oscilloscope overdrive recovery video 1 , video 2 and video 3 of my VGA generator board an older QuickStart page I made about using the NetPBM family of human-writable bitmap formats the GLOW festival (light-themed, annual, Eindhoven, NL) Awesome Space retro place (Utrecht, NL) HCC Retro interessegroep / division (Bilthoven, NL) HCC Robotica interessegroep / division (page in Dutch, Amersfoort, NL) RobotMC.be robot-related group (page in Dutch, Sint-Katelijne-Waver, BE) If interested, here's basically how one would define one out of many possible colour-effects for the VGA generator board, executed in parallel: ("Compiling" all effects on a timeline will result in a list of (R,G,B) tuples for each 60 Hz frame for each of the 4 monitors connected to the PCB.) Connector-fail: VGA generator board rendering: Actual assembled PCB:…
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1 episode 31: one year anniversary, RC2018/09 results, FPGA and Forth 21:56
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احب21:56![icon](https://imagehost.player.fm/icons/general/red-pin.svg)
Yay, after one year we're still polluting the virtual airwaves, so let's review the last year of podcasting (only takes about 8 minutes - don't cry). RetroChallenge RC2018/09 has finished, so we take a look at its winners and honourable mentions. Minor topics include a Hackalot visit, USB nullmodem hack, breadboard fail and fried scope probe clip. I briefly tried to generate a VGA image from software, but why not do it using an FPGA next time? Following convo deals with my initial experience with the Lattice ICEstick (iCE40HX1K) FPGA devboard, supported by a completely open toolchain (Yosys, Arachne-PNR, IceStorm). The J1(a) CPU is a small Forth-aimed CPU in Verilog, which leads yours truly into the weird and wonderful world of the Forth programming language. RetroChallenge 2018/09 contestants and final results Hackalot hackspace (.nl, text in Dutch) iCE40 FPGA: Lattice iCEstick USB FPGA devboard (iCE40HX1K) Yosys RTL synthesis tool for Xilinx 7 and Lattice iCE40 Arachne-PNR place & route tool for Lattice iCE40 IceStorm bitstream manipulation tools for Lattice iCE40 iCE40 FPGA & Forth: Swapforth for the J1a CPU and other platforms Swapforth explicitly for the J1a CPU Swapforth reference targeted at iCEstick, including memory map and peripheral access Forth: Gforth manual (HTML) or in PDF format - EXCELLENT Thinking Forth book by Leo Brodie Starting Forth by Leo Brodie (PDF), or in HTML format Programming Forth by Stephen Pelc HCC Retro division (in Dutch) - seems a bit outdated perhaps Nullmodem hack using homebrew module : Lame VGA image: Fancy VGA adapter:…
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