Home
JAQForum Ver 24.01
Log In or Join  
Active Topics
Local Time 22:55 04 Jul 2025 Privacy Policy
Jump to

Notice. New forum software under development. It's going to miss a few functions and look a bit ugly for a while, but I'm working on it full time now as the old forum was too unstable. Couple days, all good. If you notice any issues, please contact me.

Forum Index : Microcontroller and PC projects : UNI/O protocol help please

Author Message
Juri74

Senior Member

Joined: 06/02/2012
Location: Italy
Posts: 162
Posted: 02:03pm 26 Jan 2015
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

Hello all!
i've a 11LC010 1k eeprom that use new microchip UNI/O protocol
i need to read/write with my maximite...
does anyone attempted to do a UNI/O protocol operation with a maximite?
may someone help me please?

thanks
Juri
 
panky

Guru

Joined: 02/10/2012
Location: Australia
Posts: 1114
Posted: 08:08pm 26 Jan 2015
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

Hi Juri,

Looking at the specs for the UNI/O protocol, I think that the micromite will be too slow to manipulate an i/o pin for the Manchester encoding required. It may be possible using cfunction routines but others may comment on this.
Doug.

... almost all of the Maximites, the MicromMites, the MM Extremes, the ArmMites, the PicoMite and loving it!
 
WhiteWizzard
Guru

Joined: 05/04/2013
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 2932
Posted: 06:57am 27 Jan 2015
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

Hi Juri,

Functions would be good for this. However, one question, any reason you wish to use this protocol to address a 1K EEPROM? There are many other existing ways to address an EEPROM (or my preferred choice of FRAM) - just curious!!

WW
 
Juri74

Senior Member

Joined: 06/02/2012
Location: Italy
Posts: 162
Posted: 11:22am 27 Jan 2015
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

I've a 3d printer that store filament infos in a uni/o 1k eeprom, just curious to peek in it and maybe do modifications
 
Print this page


To reply to this topic, you need to log in.

The Back Shed's forum code is written, and hosted, in Australia.
© JAQ Software 2025