From: Andy K. <an...@ak...> - 2010-03-04 21:22:32
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What would be really cool would be if you could take an off the shelf Arduino Mega, burn amforth onto it and then use this Forthduino to clone itself to other off the shelf Arduino Mega's I guess a new design of Atmel based micro board that was purely amforth would be cool too. Mike Beach wrote: > Many thanks, Erich and Andy, for your swift responses. > > Very reassuring - makes much more sense. (Can I be the only one with this query? Maybe > someone will add a few words to the AMForth documentation.) > Good to know that the SP12 method does work, and to see some options. > > The serial comms method presumably kicks in once you have a running system with the > requisite level & polarity match to RS232. (Presumably AMForth sets up the USART for > that.) > > Mike > >> Yup ISP is it, there are a few options. >> >> 1. As below. >> 2. Google Pony Programmer, and make up a parallel port to ISP adapter >> from the schematic (Drive with avrdude) >> 3. If you have an arduino and the ver 18 IDE there is an AVRISP sketch >> as part of the examples that can be used to convert the Arduino into an >> AVRISP programmer. >> 4. Buy puker Atmel AVRISP >> >> One or other of the above are worth having. Even if you down tools on >> Forth and later go for arduino having the above to burn bootloaders into >> blank chips is great for your own projects. (Prototyped on an arduino) >> >> Hope some of this helps. >> >> Cheers >> >> Andy Kirby >> > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Download Intel® Parallel Studio Eval > Try the new software tools for yourself. Speed compiling, find bugs > proactively, and fine-tune applications for parallel performance. > See why Intel Parallel Studio got high marks during beta. > http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-sw-dev > _______________________________________________ > Amforth-devel mailing list > Amf...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/amforth-devel > |