I've been interested in getting into microcontroller programming lately, and I've been looking at Microchips PIC16F and PIC18F series (especially the PIC16F), and also Atmel's ATtiny and ATmega series ...
Celebrating little victories means a nice cup of tea as I managed to transfer an Arduino programme into an AVR ATtiny85 microcontroller. Like the people in and surrounding Raspberry Pi, clever souls ...
There are a few different ways of getting firmware onto one of AVR’s ATtiny85 microcontrollers, including bootloaders that allow for firmware to be updated without the need to plug the chip into a ...
[Frank Zhao] put together a USB business card. It’s even got the instructions printed right on the silk screen of the PCB explaining how it should be used. He based the design around an AVR ATtiny85 ...
The ATtiny1617 series of microcontrollers featuring the 8-bit AVR processor with hardware multiplier – running at up to 20MHz and with up to 16 KB Flash, 2 KB SRAM and 128 bytes of EEPROM in 14-, 20- ...
The project uses an Atmel ATtiny85 AVR microcontroller and a coil to build an RFID tag. The project uses an Atmel ATtiny85 AVR microcontroller and a coil to build an RFID tag. The AVR is being powered ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results