Hi folks,
Thanks for the help. I assumed no-one had replied and this was a dead
list as I had no reply, then realised I'd joined the old shadow group,
not the proper one! Sheesh, if I can't get that right, what chance do
I stand programming ARMs?! ;-)
Cheers,
Rob
--- In lpc2000@yahoogroups.com, "Hugh O'Keeffe" <hugh.okeeffe@a...> wrote:
> Hi Curt,
> Thanks for your feedback. FYI, we now offer a range of adapters with the
> devices all ready soldered/tested. Details on our page at
> www.ashling.com/support/LPC2000.
>
> I'd appreciate if you send me some details (directly) on the
"quirks" you
> mention below. We're working on our next release and will
incorporate good
> suggestions time/schedules permitting.
>
>
>
>
> Hugh @ http://www.ashling.com/support/lpc2100/
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Curt Powell [mailto:curt.powell@s...]
> Sent: 13 April 2004 15:29
> To: lpc2000@yahoogroups.com
> Subject: RE: [lpc2000] Thinking of using LPC2294
>
>
> Rob,
>
> I've about five months experience with the Ashling EVBA7 LPC2106 board.
> It is part of a complete development system including gcc compiler,
> source-level debugger, etc. Full license, including board, is about
> 1500USD. It's has its many quirks, but its big advantage is that it
> does work right out of the box. However, it is windows-centric. Also,
> I seem to recall that for the non-210x LPC chips, you need to buy a bare
> board and solder the LPC chip on yourself.
>
> Others on this list are developing on Linux, they might be able to point
> you to other tools that might better fit your needs in that environment.
>
> Curt
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: dibosco [mailto:robert.wood@a...]
> Sent: Tuesday, April 13, 2004 6:42 AM
> To: lpc2000@yahoogroups.com
> Subject: [lpc2000] Thinking of using LPC2294
>
>
> Hi folks,
>
> I have a project coming up for which I need some CAN ports and a
> reasonable amount of power (in MIPS, not in mA!). The LPC2294 looks
> perfect from what I can see, but I've never used ARM devices before and
> would very much appreciate a little input.
>
> It looks to me like the Ashling LPC2000 dev board would be good for
> getting me familiar with ARM, and the Crossworks compiler runs under
> Linux which is what I want. Does anyone have any experience with Ashling
> in general? Are they good products? Would Crosswork's kit work with it?
>
> My experince includes 68k, Infineon (X)C166, Fujitsu 16 bit devices and
> lots of eight bit stuff, so I have a good amount of experice including a
> large amout of 16 and some 32 bit micros. A few of the micros I've
> worked with have JTAG interfaces and I like the fact that these Phillips
> devices have them too. Are the ARM devices reasonably easy to get to
> grips with for someone with the above experience?
>
> Finally, I would need to hang a couple of mega bytes of RAM on the
> external address and data bus, how do ARM devices with internal RAM cope
> with that? It might seem like a daft question, but, for example, the
> Infineon XC16x devcies with internal flash aren't so great for hanging
> stuff off the external bus because of memory segmentation.
>
> Many thanks,
>
> Rob
>
>
>
>
>
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