Now that @marcan42 has released his awesome open-source Simga rechip code, I decided to try and port it to the PIC10F322, both as a challenge to fit it in the limited code space, and also because I love those little SOT23 chips. Should make for a fun weekend.
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Replying to @qwertymodo
And here I'd made a point not to use a PIC because I'm trying to cleanse my mind of that terrible architecture after all these years using it :-P
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Replying to @marcan42
Jokes aside, I just like finding excuses to use a SOT23 micro.
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Replying to @marcan42
Huh, I guess I hadn't seen that one before. I may actually use that instead, it's getting annoying trying to meet the fast mode timing constraints with the PIC's FOSC/4 instruction clock.
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Replying to @qwertymodo
Just make sure your programmer supports it. They switched to a new protocol since they don't have enough pins.
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Replying to @marcan42 @qwertymodo
Though to be fair my version doesn't meet fast mode timing either, at least not for the first bit (wakeup latency). That *could* be improved but it doesn't matter. I don't think any of those Sigmas supported fast mode.
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Replying to @marcan42
Do the bodies fall back to slow if fast fails, or does the lens just not work then? I haven't scoped my T5i to see what speed it runs at.
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They only switch to fast mode if the lens IDs itself as something that can support it.
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