From: Andrew on
What is he future? ARMs are coming down in price.
Microsoft has made micro framework license free.
Creating firmware has become high level (C#),
cheap, and perhaps the next big thing?

Will asm/C go the way of the dinosaur?
Will 8 bit micros become obsolete?


From: larwe on
On Dec 9, 10:11 am, Andrew <asm...(a)blackstone.biz> wrote:
> What is he future? ARMs are coming down in price.
> Microsoft has made micro framework license free.

..net is not even a single molecule in the ocean. And asm/c are not the
beginning and ending of programming languages in embedded systems.

From: Not Really Me on
Andrew wrote:
> What is he future? ARMs are coming down in price.
> Microsoft has made micro framework license free.
> Creating firmware has become high level (C#),
> cheap, and perhaps the next big thing?
>
> Will asm/C go the way of the dinosaur?
> Will 8 bit micros become obsolete?
>

Do 8051's handle multi-megabyte object files now?

--
Scott
Validated Software
Lafayette, CO



__________ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature database 4673 (20091209) __________

The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus.

http://www.eset.com




From: Vladimir Vassilevsky on


Andrew wrote:

> What is he future? ARMs are coming down in price.
> Microsoft has made micro framework license free.
> Creating firmware has become high level (C#),
> cheap, and perhaps the next big thing?
>
> Will asm/C go the way of the dinosaur?
> Will 8 bit micros become obsolete?

The future is there is going to be more and more idiots like you.

VLV

From: Andrew on
Vladimir Vassilevsky wrote:
>
>
> Andrew wrote:
>
>> What is he future? ARMs are coming down in price.
>> Microsoft has made micro framework license free.
>> Creating firmware has become high level (C#),
>> cheap, and perhaps the next big thing?
>>
>> Will asm/C go the way of the dinosaur?
>> Will 8 bit micros become obsolete?
>
> The future is there is going to be more and more idiots like you.

Jackass.