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On Jun 9, 6:16�am, John Davis wrote:
On 6/7/2010 5:49 PM, K6LHA wrote: I think we are now on the same page. We aren't even at the same bookshelf. I'm not endorsing Microchip. They are very busy making new PICs of all kinds and lots of other IC types. Also making lots of good technical information on how to use them. To use those, especially for the task of generating the control word for an Analog Devices single-chip frequency synthesizer (serial or parallel word, a choice) for any stable frequency from near-DC to 60 MHz, takes a DIFFERENT route than copying analog circuitry out of a 1960s QST project. For example, Instruction Sets. I've got five different micro instruction sets running around in my head from past microprocessor adventures and Microchip has this RISC or Reduced Instruction Set which is mostly different than any of the other five. Add to that at least two dialects of Fortran and six more dialects of Basic, yet the procedural creation of this software is the SAME as what I was doing back in 1972. One needs to CONCENTRATE on the Instruction Set being used and, hopefully, the source code editor will trap any typos or wrong syntax. It becomes harder and harder as the semiconductors get smaller and smaller. It is like trying to translate something while riding a bus along a pot-holed street with lots of nosy riders. It can be done but it takes CONCENTRATION. But .. To play around at the component level in today's VLSI world.. You need a clean room, lasers and things to control them. NO. A "foundry" is NOT needed. Not even if you are only doing digital stuff. "VLSI" is just more of the same of "LSI" and that was just more than medium-scale integrated. Ever try a "STATE MACHINE" project? One could do that using an EPROM. The essential part of an Apple ][+ floppy disk controller used one and Wozniak did his all by hisself. Fascinating. How about a Logarithmic Detector such as Analog Devices makes (several models available but they don't hand out "samples" readily now). Analog thing, just a chain of successive-detection blocks inside, designed so that the summation of their outputs has a logarithmic function of the input. Can make a very high dynamic range spectrum analyzer. If you think you NEED foundry facilities, then read Hans Camenzind's small book on "Designing Analog Chips," a wonderful look into the basic guts of doing just that, complete with all the specialized info on junctions and hanging them together. He writes very well. He made IC masks from the start, cutting Rubylith by hand. Designed the most- sold IC of the analog kind, the 555. 73, Len K6LHA |