haisamcheetah said:just 35 instructions for the 16F series and you call that difficult to program???
sofia said:I have some experience of working on the Atmel Microcontrollers (89c51, 89c52). Whenever i am on the internet (forums, websites etc etc) or read some magzine......every1 talks abt PIC micros....i wanna know that WHATS SO SPECIAL ABOUT THE PIC MICROCONTROLLERS, what PIC microcontroller can do and Atmel microcontroller (like 89c51, 89c52) cannot.
stop using CAPS LOCK here!!!
Or do you mean to yell and shout here???
/davorin
sofia said:I have some experience of working on the Atmel Microcontrollers (89c51, 89c52). Whenever i am on the internet (forums, websites etc etc) or read some magzine......every1 talks abt PIC micros....i wanna know that WHATS SO SPECIAL ABOUT THE PIC MICROCONTROLLERS, what PIC microcontroller can do and Atmel microcontroller (like 89c51, 89c52) cannot.
Bingo600 said:Im not looking to start a "uC War , and i dont know the specs of the latest pics like the DsPic" but IMHO the Atmel AVR is much faster than the pic , has same features like timers,pwm,hardware-I2C , SPI , more Ram/Flash , has Free development via GCC , has an excellent Simulator Free.
As i see it PIc came first and has a tremendous code base , and Microchip has made many more usable APP-Notes (he..he) even i sneek over there to get some for some of my AVR projects.
I chose AVR and will prob soon also do ARM , and i have not regretted it.
And have a fine functional FREE development suite.
samcheetah said:a "uC war" will initiate whenever you talk about compairing between PIC, 8051, AVR or any other microcontroller. its just natural
..
..
so what should you do then?? well just do what makes you feel good. if you want to work with AVRs then do so. if you feel that AVRs do the job you want to do then go for it. its just a matter of choice. all microcontrollers can do everything imaginable in one way or the other. so just pick one and start building projects.
have fun
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?