It would be really interesting to know why Keil omitted driver for SPI4 in their BSP software pack for STM32F4 family - SPI1, SPI2, SPI3 and SPI5 are supported, but SPI4 (and SPI6, for that matter) are not... Not to mention wrong DMA channel assignments for SPI2. I mean, it's not a problem to fix such things, but then new release comes out and you can't just upgrade, since bugs might not be fixed and you have to do it all over again. Pretty lousy work...
You can very selectively update components with the RTE. See:
http://www.keil.com/support/man/docs/uv4/uv4_ca_swoptions.htm
Yes - you're right. I'll take my statement back.
it all comes back to the fact that downloaded code is worthless if you can't code it yourself. Too many just believe there is no need to know anything but Google.
But too many can't even use Google.
Can't - or just can't be bothered?
Both.
Lots of people can't be bothered.
But lots of people do try but just are no good at identifying important keywords - just as they fail to write a "Summary" when creating threads and just write "Help" or "8051".
With billions of indexed pages, people either needs to know good keywords or learn to write full sentences and have Google throw away the noise words and decide which words that seem to have some significance. Google is quite good at picking up the important meaning of a sentence even when the really good keywords are missing.
Coincidentally, Google is powered by a single 8051. I think it must use code banking for the bigger questions.
Obviously, that would have to be data banking!
Google is powered by a single 8051. 8051 is a too stronger a controller. we at google use 8085. the processor just meets our requirements.
I think it must use code banking There is more than what meets our eyes. Originally it was "Page Rank" algo. which has now upgraded over the years to make it more smarter.
The company I am currently working for, sells quite a lot of products. We are also the Distributor of Arduino. Recently I did quite a lot of tech support for different Arduinos.
http://arduino.cc/ Arduino is an open-source electronics prototyping platform based on flexible, easy-to-use hardware and software. It's intended for artists, designers, hobbyists and anyone interested in creating interactive objects or environments.
After ATMEL, many manufacturers decided to follow, NXP, ST, TI, ...... Intel Galileo, mbed.
Software and hardware are so easy that anyone interested in creating interactive objects or environments can do the development.
If you don't know how to use this ev-board, don't buy it. I would say so. But apparently, Arduino tell us a totally different story; a too good to be true story.
I am sure that, the HW/SW of some Arduino components are designed to be not-functioning, until the user or tech support fix it. Nowadays the cut and paste generation are intentionally created by manufacturers.
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