04-25-2021, 12:55 PM
I'm not saying I'm willing to delve into it, just that it's easy to get the IDE. I have 3 or 4 programming projects backed up now, it gets hard to remember what you were doing after a few weeks, what variable was what, etc. But I had this bright idea of superimposing an FFT on an audiogram so I'm trying to remember FFTW. I think before that I was writing something to make composite images of cover scans of old electronics magazines like Popular Electronics and Radio Electronics because I found PDFs online, 50 years of each. https://worldradiohistory.com/Popular-El...-Guide.htm They have Byte back issues and several others too. And adding a pause and volume control to this: https://sourceforge.net/projects/cgi-jukebox/ And before that there was something else.
As far as I know now I could only write my flash 8 times. There are a few different hex files which come with the updater, is one of those the original by any chance? There are ones labelled ansi and iso but there's also fw_tp_update.hex and tpfw.bin. I'd say whoever wrote the current update would be a better candidate. It's almost like they didn't check all the keys when they got done. Sounded like somebody on Redit had a fixed version
Realtime, there's a guy in the Debian ARM list down south somewhere with a big old lathe he's got connected to a computer and he keeps complaining about software being too slow and all this inertia if something goes wrong and parts get broken. Apparently there are realtime kernels, have you tried one? He has a couple Rock64s but I think he went back to using a Pi.
As far as I know now I could only write my flash 8 times. There are a few different hex files which come with the updater, is one of those the original by any chance? There are ones labelled ansi and iso but there's also fw_tp_update.hex and tpfw.bin. I'd say whoever wrote the current update would be a better candidate. It's almost like they didn't check all the keys when they got done. Sounded like somebody on Redit had a fixed version
Realtime, there's a guy in the Debian ARM list down south somewhere with a big old lathe he's got connected to a computer and he keeps complaining about software being too slow and all this inertia if something goes wrong and parts get broken. Apparently there are realtime kernels, have you tried one? He has a couple Rock64s but I think he went back to using a Pi.