From: linnix on
On Dec 22, 6:54 am, Mike Silva <snarflem...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> On Dec 21, 6:53 pm, larwe <zwsdot...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > On Dec 21, 3:35 pm, steve <bungalow_st...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> > > > M2-16K-12x4 (16K code, 12 segments and 4 commons)
> > > > M2-64K-20x8 (64K code, 20 segments and 8 commons)
>
> > > ?? can someone decode this for me
>
> > Sure: There exist a lot of 6502-core (or modified-6502-core, and
> > 65C816-type-core) micros sold into various niche markets. If you don't
> > already know about them, you probably don't have what it takes to buy
> > them.
>
> What does it take to buy them, besides a few thousand dollars?

NDA. Email me (linnix123(a)yahoo.com) to sign one.

I have to be careful this time. I lost the last project because all
the information I fed to the customer ended up with the competitor.
Of course, I have no idea what the competitor is using, but something
like M2 for sure.

I feel like the new Marco Polo, discovering the new electronic
wonderland. I found at least three sources of M2 like chip. The
first source requires external LDO and OPAMP, but the total BOM is
still cheaper than the second source. I am still waiting for response
from the third source.

I believe this is the 4 bitter everybody is thinking about, except it
look and feel like 8 bits 6502. They are remarkably similar but
different. It could be coming from a central design source.
First  |  Prev  | 
Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Prev: 16C752 Problem
Next: MAX3421E to PIC18F4550