this? I'd like to get
this working with its GPIO rather than using a USB-serial, which only
really served as a proof-of-concept.
Regards,
Andrew
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Andrew Back
http://carrierdetect.com
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anies licensed to manufacture Raspberry Pi at this stage — it's
early days...
Regards,
Andrew
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Andrew Back
http://carrierdetect.com
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t price, great... But until then I'm not going
to complain when the Broadcom SoC is making this price point
possible...
As to the GPU firmware — are there many modern GPUs where you get the
source to their firmware?
Regards,
Andrew
--
Andrew Back
http://carrierdetect.com
ative might be a daughterboard for a Raspberry Pi,
which would give you an ARM/Linux base for not much more money, and
you could use it to create a standalone system that drives an old
monitor for a display.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raspberry_Pi
Regards,
Andrew
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Andrew Back
http://car
d.
I don't have DCD on the Raspberry Pi — only GPIO pins. So it's looks
as though the driver would need hacking.
I'm also yet to find details of the Synergy Systems board, and looks
like I might have to just sketch it out. Thankfully, there doesn't
look to be much to it
with the
USB<->3.3v serial adapter that I'm using. Though the board does also
have GPIO pins, which I'm hoping I could somehow use for the PPS with
GPS, or with the Symtrik.
Regards,
Andrew
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Andrew Back
http://carrierdetect.com
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