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  1. Embed this notice
    Harblinger (harblinger@wizard.casa)'s status on Monday, 24-Mar-2025 05:05:40 JST Harblinger Harblinger

    Tiny MCU dropped
    https://www.ti.com/product/MSPM0C1104

    In conversation about 3 months ago from wizard.casa permalink

    Attachments

    1. No result found on File_thumbnail lookup.
      MSPM0C1104 data sheet, product information and support | TI.com
      TI’s MSPM0C1104 is a 24MHz Arm® Cortex®-M0+ MCU with 16KB flash, 1KB SRAM, 12-bit ADC. Find parameters, ordering and quality information
    • Embed this notice
      snacks (snacks@netzsphaere.xyz)'s status on Monday, 24-Mar-2025 05:05:40 JST snacks snacks
      in reply to
      @harblinger time for a new connection machine
      In conversation about 3 months ago permalink
    • Embed this notice
      snacks (snacks@netzsphaere.xyz)'s status on Monday, 24-Mar-2025 06:40:29 JST snacks snacks
      in reply to
      @harblinger https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connection_Machine
      Ig i2c would be the most useful interface it has for this...
      In conversation about 3 months ago permalink

      Attachments

      1. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: upload.wikimedia.org
        Connection Machine
        The Connection Machine (CM) is a member of a series of massively parallel supercomputers sold by Thinking Machines Corporation. The idea for the Connection Machine grew out of doctoral research on alternatives to the traditional von Neumann architecture of computers by Danny Hillis at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the early 1980s. Starting with CM-1, the machines were intended originally for applications in artificial intelligence (AI) and symbolic processing, but later versions found greater success in the field of computational science. Origin of idea Danny Hillis and Sheryl Handler founded Thinking Machines Corporation (TMC) in Waltham, Massachusetts, in 1983, moving in 1984 to Cambridge, MA. At TMC, Hillis assembled a team to develop what would become the CM-1 Connection Machine, a design for a massively parallel hypercube-based arrangement of thousands of microprocessors, springing from his PhD thesis work at MIT in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (1985). The dissertation won the ACM Distinguished Dissertation prize in 1985, and was presented as a monograph that overviewed the philosophy...
    • Embed this notice
      Harblinger (harblinger@wizard.casa)'s status on Monday, 24-Mar-2025 06:40:30 JST Harblinger Harblinger
      in reply to
      • snacks

      @snacks what kind of connection :acat_hmm:

      In conversation about 3 months ago permalink
    • Embed this notice
      Harblinger (harblinger@wizard.casa)'s status on Monday, 24-Mar-2025 06:40:34 JST Harblinger Harblinger
      in reply to
      • Thisworldissealing

      @worldisrotting I'm pretty retarded too, maybe that's why I like microcontrollers, they're simpler computers! Set some bits like a dip switch to set how the pins/peripherals act and do a little code to use them

      In conversation about 3 months ago permalink
      snacks likes this.
    • Embed this notice
      Thisworldissealing (worldisrotting@seal.cafe)'s status on Monday, 24-Mar-2025 06:40:35 JST Thisworldissealing Thisworldissealing
      in reply to
      Man computers are so cool, ashame I'm retarded
      In conversation about 3 months ago permalink

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