Micromite T Manual

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Micromite T Manual

Please wait, loading content ( 0% complete). • • • • by Dr David Maddison • by Geoff Graham • by Jim Rowe & Nicholas Vinen • by John Clarke • • by Nicholas Vinen • by Design by Philip Tallents, article by Ross Tester • • by Jim Rowe • • by Ken Kranz • by Associate Professor Graham Parslow • • • This is only a preview of the January 2015 issue of Silicon Chip. You can view 36 of the 104 pages in the full issue and the advertisments. For full access, the issue for $8.20 or for access to the latest issues. The Micromite Mk.2 More memory, more functions & much faster than before! Introduced in the May 2014 issue of SILICON CHIP, the Micromite is a small 28-pin chip running a powerful BASIC interpreter. Now we introduce the Micromite Mk.2 with more memory, higher speed and a host of other improvements.

It’s all due to the relentless march of semiconductor technology. By Geoff Graham T HE SEMICONDUCTOR industry does move fast. Just after the introduction of the Micromite back in May 2014, the manufacturer of the PIC32MX150F128 microcontroller used in the device surprised us with a new version of the chip. Designated the PIC32MX170F256, it has the same capabilities as the original but has double the amount of RAM and flash memory. Even better, it only costs 40 cents more.

We had gone to a lot of effort to squeeze the MMBasic interpreter into the original chip. However, as soon as we saw the new chip, we started thinking of implementing some of the features that were missed out in the original version. The result is the Micromite Mk2. It does everything the original Micromite did but it does it much faster, with a lot more memory and a lot more features. The original Micromite is still fine for everyday jobs; it’s just that it now has a newer and faster cousin. Tesseract User Manual. The Micromite Just in case you missed the May 2014 issue, the Micromite is a PIC32MX150F128 microcontroller programmed with our BASIC interpreter called MMBasic. This microcontroller comes in two package styles: (1) a 28pin plastic dual-in-line (DIL) package which can be plugged into a breadboard or IC socket; and (2) a 44-pin surface mount (SMD) package.

The 28-pin Micromite has 19 I/O pins which can be configured by the The Micromite Mk.2 is just a Microchip PIC32MX170F256 microcontroller programmed with Version 4.6 of our MMBasic interpreter. You can buy the microcontroller in both 28-pin and 44-pin versions and once programmed it turns into an easy to use controller that you can employ for a host of tasks, eg, servo control, infrared remote control, distance sensors, temperature sensors and much more. 20 Silicon Chip BASIC program to be digital inputs or outputs, analog inputs, frequency measurement inputs and more.

The 44-pin chip has 33 I/O pins with the same characteristics. The BASIC interpreter running on the Micromite is a high-level implementation of the language. It supports floating point and strings, long variable names, arrays with multiple dimensions, user defined subroutines/ functions and a host of other advanced programming features. Programs are stored in the chip’s internal flash memory and can be edited on the chip using the inbuilt full-screen editor and a serial link.

A program can be configured to run immediately on power-up so that the Micromite acts as a pre-programmed custom chip and the user need not know anything about what’s running inside. Perhaps the most powerful feature of the Micromite is the range of communications protocols that it supports. These include I2C, asynchronous ser­ ial, RS232, IEEE 485, SPI and 1-Wire. Using these, your program can communicate with other chips and sensors and can send data to test equipment. The new chip As stated, the Micromite Mk.2 uses the new PIC32MX170F256 series. For people who struggle to decode these siliconchip.com.au part numbers, “PIC32” refers to the 32-bit family of Microchip processors, “MX170” is the chip’s part number and “F256” refers to the amount of flash memory in the chip (256K bytes in this case). The MX170 comes in a number of variations with different packages, pin numbers and maximum speeds.