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Is an article about building Arduino on a single chip with a minimum of parts and USB 2.0 support interesting?
I built an Arduino on one chip. The total number of parts: Chip, quartz, a couple of resistors and an LED - 6-7. The main advantage is that no intermediate USB-RS232 chips are needed. The chip already supports the USB 2.0 protocol. Interesting?
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Yeah interesting.
Another interesting thing is how to make devices on Arduino so that they are defined as USB devices. And how to write drivers for such devices that exchange simple data with the device in both directions.
You would at least connect a thermocouple, I'm not talking about more complex sensors. Tired of LEDs, there are already a legion of them.
Interesting!!! For a long time, hands have not reached to buy a ready-made board, but here how to assemble it yourself, and even without intermediate USB-RS232 chips!
A month ago, I slipped through an article with the meaning "what is Arduino and why you shouldn't use them."
I hope the author will also appear in your article, there were interesting holivarchiki
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