Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

While I mostly agree, I have some small quibbles which I think will present a more complete picture.

I've had a good developer experience with 74LS00-family SSI chips (like the quad-NAND-gate 74LS00 and the hex-inverter 74LS04), so your mileage may vary.

Just to clarify, the Padauk and Nyquest chips I linked above are one-time programmable (PROM), not mask ROM, except the PFS122 (3.53ยข), which is reprogrammable Flash. (It's advisable to debug your code with a Flash chip or an ICE before you start consuming PROM chips, unless you really like to desolder.) Padauk doesn't seem to make mask-ROM chips at all, and I haven't seen any from Nyquest.

I'm not sure what you mean by "highly specialized". They're tiny, slow 8-bit microcontrollers, so you will certainly be disappointed if you go in hoping for STM32-like capabilities. But they're programmable, and their peripherals don't include things like LiDAR pulse timing circuits or AES encryption hardware or anything like that. It's just very general-purpose stuff like watchdog timers and PWM generators.



Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: