DIY 256-Core RISC-V super computer

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  • čas přidán 9. 06. 2024
  • Free Assembly for 1-6 Layer PCBs at JLCPCB, 3D Printing from $0.3, Sign up to Get $60 Coupons here: jlcpcb.com/?from=bitluni (Sponsor)
    This new cluster build escalated quickly. Especially with the bugs I built in but here are some specs:
    256x RISC-V 48MHz
    17x RISC-V 144MHz
    640x GPIO
    256x ADC
    17x 8-Bit bus
    Combined single core clock rate would be 14.7GHz not that impressive but also not too shabby.
    0:00 Supercluster recap
    0:41 Intro
    1:41 PCB Design and BU
    2:36 JLCPCB
    3:30 Assembly
    5:14 First tests
    5:48 BUS protocol fix
    8:28 BUS tests
    9:53 Conclusion
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 256

  • @mikeselectricstuff
    @mikeselectricstuff Před měsícem +401

    Dude - use a foot-operated vacuum pen - much quicker & easier than tweezers!

    • @johboh
      @johboh Před měsícem +21

      I would like one! Any recommendations?

    • @ProtonOne11
      @ProtonOne11 Před měsícem +17

      @@johboh I guess the Pixel Pump might be a good candidate. I have not used one myself, but the fact that it's an open project is a good thing. Of course there are cheaper and less capable options, but if you do regular board assemblies, buying a decent and a bit more expensive tool once will save you a lot of time and money over time.

  • @gsuberland
    @gsuberland Před měsícem +210

    I think your decision to not put everything on one big shared bus was the smart approach. Each input pin on the bus has a small amount of parasitic capacitance, which increases bus loading and requires additional drive current from the output pin driving the bus. That increases dI/dt which means more radiative EMI and crosstalk, and distorts the edges. This is less of a problem with an open drain setup, but still causes slower edge transitions and ringing. The long traces will have a lot of inductance which, left undamped, also tends to cause a lot of ringing. Longer traces also mean you're getting to the point where you're having to model them as transmission lines, since the Nyquist frequency of the design is set by the rise/fall time (not the clock!) and that's very fast on modern ICs - it's pretty common to see frequency components in the 300-800MHz range during transitions, so if you're running traces further than about 9cm you can no longer treat them as lumped lines. Once you get to this sort of scale you typically want to be using bus redrivers to break the bus up into smaller segments to avoid SI/EMI problems.
    If you start finding that you have SI issues once you add all the boards, two things you can do are reducing the pullup resistor value and adding a small resistor in series with each IO line. Right now with 5.1kΩ pullups you've got that classic sharkfin shaped clock, where the pullup resistor takes a while to overcome all the parasitic capacitance on the board. You can speed that rising edge up by reducing that pullup resistance - bodging a second 5.1kΩ resistor on top will do that. The falling edge is very fast because the IO pins are actively pulling the bus to ground. This causes big dI/dt spikes at the falling edge, while all that charge stored in the parasitic capacitances rushes through the low impedance path created by the active low-side FET. You can moderate that dI/dt with a small value resistor (e.g. 22Ω) in series with each of the IOs, so the bus is still strongly pulled down but the current isn't controlled only by the Rds(on) of the low-side FET in the IO. Since you've already spun the boards this might be kinda tricky to add - maybe something for a rev2/3? :)

    • @rya3190
      @rya3190 Před měsícem +8

      It also doesn't hurt that he left the "repetition" and modularity to the board coppies. Kind of made me think of repeating code where a loop should be implemented. It would be easier to maintain/rid of bugs, and left the mind numbing repetition to the manufacturing. Not to mention he can expand the cluster as needed.

    • @modernsolutions6631
      @modernsolutions6631 Před měsícem +4

      It was fun meeting you in person during CCC last year. Strange to see you pop up in a comment section though.

    • @gsuberland
      @gsuberland Před měsícem +3

      @@modernsolutions6631 I've never been to CCC! EMF Camp 2020, maybe?

    • @modernsolutions6631
      @modernsolutions6631 Před 10 dny

      @@gsuberland My bad. Then i must have confused you.

  • @jeffpkamp
    @jeffpkamp Před měsícem +164

    I love the random clock variations on the blink sketch. Fun source lf entropy.

    • @hellsing56666
      @hellsing56666 Před měsícem +27

      It's one of the nightmare of electrical designer. Very hard to synchronize differents components at high speed.

    • @gsuberland
      @gsuberland Před měsícem +22

      It's also sensitive to temperature, so if you have a thermal gradient across the ICs you'll find that some drift faster than others.

    • @king_james_official
      @king_james_official Před měsícem +3

      @@gsuberlandheating up half of the boards sounds like a cool idea

    • @siz1700
      @siz1700 Před 28 dny +3

      @@king_james_official hot* idea

    • @king_james_official
      @king_james_official Před 28 dny +1

      @@siz1700 ha ha ha!!! (with long pauses in between)

  • @brownb2vid
    @brownb2vid Před měsícem +51

    Makes me wish I'd done electrical engineering at university. This level of dev is beyond my capability of simple analog electronics, I'm like a monkey with a spanner. Not enough time in the day now to reskill but your work is inspiring and why I'm subscribed.

    • @thek3743
      @thek3743 Před měsícem +13

      Want an easy start? Watch Ben Eater videos! Start with the breadboard series, then the 6502!

    • @curtheisler1200
      @curtheisler1200 Před měsícem +4

      @@thek3743 Ben eater is the GOAT. 100% great series. His 12(?) part networking series is also great.

    • @theRPGmaster
      @theRPGmaster Před 25 dny +2

      Same here. I'm a software developer, so I don't have much time, but I've always been interested in electrical.

  • @tonywmckinney
    @tonywmckinney Před měsícem +102

    So awesome. IMO Fiasco would be a cool code name for a project or chip.

    • @ted_van_loon
      @ted_van_loon Před měsícem +6

      fiasco 256, that way there can also be a fiasco 10000

    • @jercos
      @jercos Před měsícem +4

      The L4Re Microkernel is named Fiasco.

  • @tungstikum
    @tungstikum Před měsícem +58

    Watching your pick and place makes me want to both go into electronics and stay the heck away from it.

  • @rya3190
    @rya3190 Před měsícem +11

    At 10 pins free per 48mhz cpu, you could connect 20,040 leds (or 6 million if they are combined). Enough to make a small terminal screen...or play bad apple. With each pin handling 90 leds at 48Mhz, this thing would push pixels like a monster.
    Just need the timing to be perfect.....

  • @rhysperry111
    @rhysperry111 Před měsícem +56

    Not sure if you've done this already, but it might make sense for you to have a seperate "subnet" for each blade and then only send transmitted data on the inter-blade bus if the destination is outside of that subnet.

    • @uis246
      @uis246 Před měsícem +11

      Dude, design GPU already

    • @monad_tcp
      @monad_tcp Před měsícem +12

      oh my god, you're reinventing the ethernet

    • @tophyr
      @tophyr Před měsícem +8

      @@monad_tcp that sort of sub-networked interconnect is common in CPU design as well

    • @cabbose2552
      @cabbose2552 Před 28 dny +3

      @@tophyr mfw everything is just ethernet

  • @morothia
    @morothia Před měsícem +43

    Ok, but can it run Crisis?

    • @pazsion
      @pazsion Před 18 dny +7

      in theory, yes... i guess we will see.
      first doom, then quake, then crisys then half life 🤓

    • @pazsion
      @pazsion Před 18 dny +5

      doom first quake halflife crisys. it should run it. but without any gpu it may be animated gif gameplay...

    • @sharma_harsh
      @sharma_harsh Před 11 dny

      Crysis*

    • @kirill9064
      @kirill9064 Před dnem

      @@sharma_harsh Who cares about video games? Important question is: Can it run BOINC projects?

  • @GuyPerson-jt9tv
    @GuyPerson-jt9tv Před měsícem +27

    Can it run Doom?

    • @Meskalin_
      @Meskalin_ Před 24 dny +4

      sounds like a reasonable end goal

  • @user-lw2ky7ez2x
    @user-lw2ky7ez2x Před měsícem +14

    I am a software person and I built cards with my electronic partner 15 years ago that each card has three microchip processors that communicate with each other on the card in fast serial communication on pullup lines. These cards communicated with other similar cards for ranges of 10 km on a pair of cords that also transferred the energy for the needs of agriculture in the field.

  • @lelsewherelelsewhere9435
    @lelsewherelelsewhere9435 Před měsícem +65

    Ever heard of the "transputer", a 1980s commercial computer made of a collection of thousands of tiny weak processors working in parrel for advanced scientific tasks.
    Your cluster reminds me of it.
    Retrobytes channel made a video on it several months ago.

    • @timsoft3
      @timsoft3 Před měsícem +4

      we did basic programming on them in the 90's. used for fft audio processing

    • @destiny_02
      @destiny_02 Před měsícem +8

      that sounds pretty much like a gpu with its shader units

    • @cryptocsguy9282
      @cryptocsguy9282 Před měsícem

      Yep I was reading an article on the chips & cheese blog the other day about a Qualcomn mobile GPU & that's what I was thinking ​@destiny_02

    • @laurensweyn
      @laurensweyn Před měsícem +3

      Reminds me of TIS-100

    • @king_james_official
      @king_james_official Před měsícem +2

      that's how a modern video card works!!! they have thousands of units (they're called differently among gpu manufacturers) that run in parallel executing small programs called shaders, which (oversimplifying now) all determine the color of EVERY pixel on your screen tens of times a second

  • @plebbin.
    @plebbin. Před měsícem +2

    first ime ive seen tape and tray of parts being used, kudos. i did inkdot for a year because i loved the simplicity and focus it required. they moved me to pin refurbishing when they found out i could do it easily

  • @manfrommars
    @manfrommars Před 7 dny

    wow, this is incredible to see the idea from start. You're awesome!

  • @alexscott4277
    @alexscott4277 Před měsícem +1

    As always, an amazing project. The funky music for hand SMD assembly *almost* made it look enjoyable 😂

  • @mrkosmos9421
    @mrkosmos9421 Před měsícem +28

    You're going to run Game of Life on that thing, aren't you?

  • @roflchopter11
    @roflchopter11 Před měsícem +16

    Your message collision scheme is remarkably similar to how CAN. works. It seems you've independently discovered an excellent system. very impressive.

    • @masterofx32
      @masterofx32 Před měsícem +4

      Kind of, but CAN has a priority system and allows the message of the highest priority transmitter to go through. This is especially important in automotive applications.

    • @curtheisler1200
      @curtheisler1200 Před měsícem +6

      It's CSMA-CD. Used most commonly in 802.3 (commonly ethernet) communications.

  • @seanphillips429
    @seanphillips429 Před měsícem

    This is the coolest thing I've seen in a while!

  • @dr.flywheel5493
    @dr.flywheel5493 Před měsícem

    Many kudos for attempting such a "mega-project". No pain no gain...

  • @Sal3600
    @Sal3600 Před 28 dny

    Wow just discovered. Awesome. Can't wait for the next!!

  • @RPrice_OG
    @RPrice_OG Před měsícem +1

    Cool project, thanks for sharing.

  • @onecircuit-as
    @onecircuit-as Před měsícem +1

    Amazing work, what a project! 😮👍

  • @roysigurdkarlsbakk3842
    @roysigurdkarlsbakk3842 Před měsícem +3

    CSMA/CD reinvented :)

  • @edgeeffect
    @edgeeffect Před měsícem +5

    I love it when blink goes out of sync... it looks like one of Big Clive's "supercomputers" except it really is a supercomputer!

    • @MichaelKingsfordGray
      @MichaelKingsfordGray Před měsícem

      It reminds me of the Lost in Space equipment in the early 1960s!
      Great danger.

  • @monad_tcp
    @monad_tcp Před měsícem +2

    that's going to be fun to program

  • @Maisonier
    @Maisonier Před 25 dny

    Amazing video! you are teaching a lot of stuff with this.

  • @SharpsBox
    @SharpsBox Před měsícem

    I don’t know what it is, but I love it! More!

  • @imbw267
    @imbw267 Před měsícem +1

    8:36 Holy rise time Batman!
    The Signal Integrity engineer just started breaking out in a cold sweat

  • @dennisfahey2379
    @dennisfahey2379 Před měsícem +2

    You are very close to the original Ethernet CSMA/CD protocol. The XOR checksum has the problem that two colliders can cancel eachother - two single bit errors could result in a correct checksum - making a packet "appear" good. As such Ethernet uses a CRC. Further, if you detect a collision you "jam" the whole packet with alternating ones and zeros to really mess it up and then do your randomized backoff. What you will find, and you are not the first, is that as you scale the collisions will increase and the bandwidth will be insufficient. The cores will be data starved. This was the case with the Intel MIC's (Knight's Corner). They used PCI-E but the issue is the same, multidrop and star topologies oversubscribe easily. You will note datacenters (home of enormous clusters) used leaf spine (and other) interconnects to mitigate this. But fun none the less. So you have a huge number of course - what will you do with it? What would others in the comments run?

  • @diano5255
    @diano5255 Před měsícem

    Ein Jahr jeden Tag auf neue warten hat sich gelohnt 🥹🥹

  • @TheChillieboo
    @TheChillieboo Před měsícem

    this is nuts! , i love it!

  • @thearguenaut3187
    @thearguenaut3187 Před 6 dny

    man I wish I had your skillset.

  • @ABaumstumpf
    @ABaumstumpf Před měsícem +9

    That is a lot of CPU power for some random blinking LEDs :)

    • @Ral2O3_
      @Ral2O3_ Před 13 dny

      That could have been achieved with much less resources and effort indeed

  • @WyrdieBeardie
    @WyrdieBeardie Před měsícem

    This is so awesome!

  • @RUCan
    @RUCan Před 25 dny

    Awesome work 😮

  • @nogrend
    @nogrend Před měsícem

    after 2 minutes you already deserve a like!

  • @GlennHamblin
    @GlennHamblin Před měsícem

    Heck of a great project! And custom CDMA!

  • @chris-tal
    @chris-tal Před měsícem +1

    This project reminded me about both the game of life automaton, KISS principle and CD part of CSMA/CD.

  • @kenisi_thedevilonhigh
    @kenisi_thedevilonhigh Před 20 dny

    Need more!

  • @g.o.a.t9804
    @g.o.a.t9804 Před 25 dny

    A true work of art!
    My hats off to you! 🍻

  • @profdc9501
    @profdc9501 Před 26 dny +1

    I would use an active pullup (constant current source) on the bus with so many devices on the bus. It could be a current mirror with two P MOSFET transistors (e.g. BSS84). With 5 mA current, it would probably speed up the communications a lot.

  • @orsacchiottospennacchiotto9444

    i just discover your channel an io immediately subscrtibed. this project mesmerize me. keep on!

  • @YUNGeggFoo
    @YUNGeggFoo Před 26 dny

    just discovered your channel and this is super cool! what was your career path that got you into electronics? thanks!

  • @anon_y_mousse
    @anon_y_mousse Před 8 dny

    I have to admit, watching them go out of sync is beautiful. Am I weird to like that more than synchronized blinking?

  • @wchorski
    @wchorski Před měsícem

    GAME OF LIFE on this would be insaine

  • @cristianoo2
    @cristianoo2 Před měsícem

    Thats HUGE!!

  • @EXQEX9
    @EXQEX9 Před měsícem +1

    "...actually 273 but okay" is the best subtitle for a video in the history of the platform.

  • @JohnKerrashVirgo
    @JohnKerrashVirgo Před měsícem

    The blink looked like game of life 😂

  • @raffycamulataldamar6645
    @raffycamulataldamar6645 Před měsícem

    Wow that's insane

  • @Knochi77
    @Knochi77 Před měsícem

    Really nice project. What are you using for the top view shots?
    4:39

  • @longshot789
    @longshot789 Před měsícem

    Great stuff

  • @ted_van_loon
    @ted_van_loon Před měsícem +1

    sounds insane in performance, but actually would be roughly equal to 4 cores running at just over 3ghz due to the low clockspeed.
    that said it does show it is possible, and if this works it will also work with much faster risk-v chips.
    actually in some arm architectures the cores where designed to be kind of used like this so you could just keep scaling them, there was actually some 1000core arm cpu somewhere around 2013 or such, sadly never took of since back then mulithreading didn't really practically exist yet, as in that basically no softwares used it, and that things like handling large amounts of data at once wheren't a thing yet.
    that said, risc-v is opensource, so it means it should be possible to actually make a risc-v cpu which directly combines tons of cores.
    if you plan to make something like that I do have a better way for you to try out than using a single bus(or a few busses) since using busses like that can work but can have problems, I roughly designed a new experimental way of doing such multichip communication for the raspberry pi foundation some years ago, actually was to try and get them to make a board with way more cores. but essentially it is a method giving quite some bandwith but also large buffering and chips being able to get the data when they are ready instead of needing to accept it directly, that said, in some cases direct busses might be more usefull, luckily in a full cpu design you can make many more busses, both have advantages and weaknesses depending on the loads.

  • @marvintraxel6955
    @marvintraxel6955 Před měsícem

    You could use the now free command pin to sync all the clocks together

  • @RubenKelevra
    @RubenKelevra Před měsícem

    If you send a considerable amount of broadcast it makes sense to have a bit after the source address which is only set if it's a broadcast. So you can skip the target address completely.
    This only makes sense if you send a lot of broadcast messages, as every unicast message is then 1 bit longer

  • @peter.stimpel
    @peter.stimpel Před měsícem +7

    I know people who would go over the edge for your random parts placement :) "All values of similar resistors have to face the same directions"... LOL. Nice one. Wish I had more time to join the livestreams again ...

    • @valet_noir
      @valet_noir Před měsícem +1

      how is your comment 2h old ? the video was uploaded 5min ago 🤔

    • @peter.stimpel
      @peter.stimpel Před měsícem +7

      @@valet_noir Patrons get early access, even this means only 2 hours in Butluni terms. Other CZcamsrs are a bit more generous here ;)

    • @edgeeffect
      @edgeeffect Před měsícem +1

      All values of all components must face the same direction!!! ;)

  • @matthewvenn
    @matthewvenn Před měsícem

    crazy! in a good way!

  • @bitegoatie
    @bitegoatie Před měsícem

    You may be nuts, but that's much of the fun of watching. This project is a delightful sprawl, full of potential and hurdles. What do you want it to become, beyond the LED art? I mean, is there a target functionality or is the journey the goal?
    Well, I guess we'll find out.

  • @TheTechRandom
    @TheTechRandom Před měsícem

    You may want to decrease the resistance on your clock line. A slow rise time can cause one of the processors to miss a clock and become out of sync with the host.

  • @justinpatterson5291
    @justinpatterson5291 Před 10 dny

    Game of Life; Each Cell (group) has a finite time to check for- Food, Friend or Foe in adjacent blocks. Movement is turn based.
    Food, a limited, randomly placed resource, extends (life) up to 10 turns. Finding a Friend, adds a chance of 1-2 new Cells each turn.
    Each Foe can remove 1 adjacent Cell (not of its group) per turn, adding a chance for their group to grow next turn.
    *time is finite* for all Cells. Friend, Food or Foe. Meaning- the simulation ends, and you get to see a nice pattern of what groups fizzled, which ones flourished.

  • @aquahood
    @aquahood Před měsícem

    You can also add in a small fpga to make the to run or manage the cluster?

  • @christopherneufelt8971
    @christopherneufelt8971 Před 21 dnem

    So you are the guy that created the brain of skynet! I knew it!

  • @NeuroneLibero
    @NeuroneLibero Před měsícem +1

    Very interesting and good job, but what's the next step?

  • @plutonianfairy
    @plutonianfairy Před měsícem +1

    Would you he able to upload those first streams in which you made the cluster and the protocol? It's not on twitch nor CZcams...

  • @GRAYgauss
    @GRAYgauss Před měsícem

    I have been planning to do this with sg2002s.

  • @DarkMaster0
    @DarkMaster0 Před 9 dny

    An absolutely awesome project with great prospects and the limitation is the users imagination.
    however, I have 2 questions:
    1. can it run doom?
    2. in chat language was the code written? was it C/C++>

  • @pazsion
    @pazsion Před 17 dny

    would be really cool to see this do something like a phone or computer software benchmark... with the lights it would be very satisfying... knowing the computer is actually computing... do the same for the hd/ssd and gpu 🤓🤓🤓 actual functional led display / rgb lighting

  • @oodLifeChannel
    @oodLifeChannel Před měsícem

    super..., so what is it for? what you can implement on it?

  • @xor01
    @xor01 Před měsícem

    if the collision detection is waiting a random time using the ID as the seed so they're always different, why not just use the ID as the amount of wait time directly?

  • @FrankGraffagnino
    @FrankGraffagnino Před 29 dny

    this is really incredible. i'd love to see a collab between you and @beneater !!! Really great work.

  • @inlywang8157
    @inlywang8157 Před měsícem

    Pretty project, thanks for sharing

  • @GillesLouisReneDeleuze
    @GillesLouisReneDeleuze Před měsícem +1

    I would mine so many moneroj with this

  • @republicofsandles
    @republicofsandles Před měsícem

    What might be some of the use cases for the Megacluster?

  • @Aplysia
    @Aplysia Před měsícem

    What an epic project! Subscribed
    Probably dumb question, but could the collision detection be replaced by a queueing system where an mcu can request the bus then get serviced fifo? Maybe that would be slower.
    Would be cool to see a map-reduce algorithm running on this beast.

    • @jercos
      @jercos Před měsícem +1

      That becomes a latency/bandwidth tradeoff... if you can request large chunks of dedicated time, you can shift bytes out at full speed, while both collision detection and turnaround (the system setting after currents potentially change direction on the backplane, also peak EMI) inherently slows down the timing required. Many systems use a fast clock with added guard intervals, clock cycles where nobody drives the bus.

  • @falin9557
    @falin9557 Před 23 dny

    I've got two questions:
    1) for what could this be used for?
    2) for the waiting time after a collision, couldn't you use the ID itself as a delay? Or maybe force them to report in order, maybe using a master or calling the next one in line

  • @mumbaiverve2307
    @mumbaiverve2307 Před měsícem

    Hi, Is there a video on the tool chain for this uC ? Cheers !

  • @jmemusic
    @jmemusic Před měsícem

    5:18 > We can hear you laughing. I like your enthusiasm

  • @samthedev32
    @samthedev32 Před měsícem

    how is software development with the ch32 ic? i have been thinking of trying them out, but the "sdk" (or examples) looked really scary...

  • @minhmc2828
    @minhmc2828 Před měsícem +1

    😅 This is a kind of projects I really like watching, but I have a question, what can It really do beside some basic stuffs, anything like computing with a lot of cores ( that may be too hard 😮 ). In my opinion, this is an interesting project I love. Thank you for making the video, hope you have a great day 🎉🎉🎉

    • @sc0or
      @sc0or Před 27 dny +1

      Exactly. I think that to blink a LED, some FPGA will beat x10 RISC-V by number of I/Os, speed, and by a price. It's interesting to have some idea what is it for, how much for one flop, what are alternatives in terms of a price, performance, so on.. It's like to build a cluster with Raspberry PIs, when you can take an i7 and save money and have much better performance.

  • @uditkotnis7531
    @uditkotnis7531 Před 20 dny

    You are integrating systems for the s100 bus.

  • @knr1
    @knr1 Před měsícem

    Despite missing half of the explanation bcs I have no idea what the used terms means, I nevertheless found everything fascinating. For me, its like our modern day version of an art painting. Can u tell me which kind of university degree/knowledge/skills are necessary for such project? And good job! 👍

  • @adrasx6999
    @adrasx6999 Před měsícem

    Did you just create a pretty good random number generator with those blinking leds? Looks much cooler than those lava lamps

  • @HolySon-3869
    @HolySon-3869 Před 4 dny

    I wonder how the Green Arrays chips handle communicating between CPU's.

  • @marksummers9543
    @marksummers9543 Před měsícem

    I think this is an amazing achievement. I would love to see you demonstrate its speed with some "sha-1"cracking or comparison testing against a raspberry pi 5 and a mid range PC with a long duration 24hr minimum to see how far 17Ghz can go I a day

  • @FroggyTWrite
    @FroggyTWrite Před měsícem

    now can this thing actually process data like a cluster?

  • @aquahood
    @aquahood Před měsícem

    And then add some what are currently at the moment quite inexpensive RAM and Storage for BIOS?

  • @antisteo
    @antisteo Před měsícem

    how many GBit/s is your outside communication? Do you use QSFP??

  • @davidcache
    @davidcache Před měsícem

    he's gone mad!

  • @fishsayhelo9872
    @fishsayhelo9872 Před měsícem +1

    very gud 👍

  • @Queekusme
    @Queekusme Před měsícem

    Your collision detection is very similar if not the same as CAN Bus collision detection (I need to check but I believe it’s at least close)

  • @MinkSquared
    @MinkSquared Před měsícem

    so i only understood like 20% of this. what is this for? whats the computing power? how does it compare to a "modern" equivalent?

  • @phantu9113579
    @phantu9113579 Před měsícem +1

    nice project, but i have one question. i want to try this chip CH32V003 but can i use other swd debugger or it need to be e-link debugger?

    • @0LoneTech
      @0LoneTech Před měsícem +1

      SWD is a 2 wire ARM variant of JTAG (normally 4 or 5 wires), unlikely to appear on non-ARM chips. CH32V003 uses a different 1 wire debug interface they call SWD or SDI.

  • @balticlabor
    @balticlabor Před měsícem

    Nice!

  • @filkry
    @filkry Před měsícem

    What’s the music playing during assembly at 4:13?

  • @AndrewMorris-wz1vq
    @AndrewMorris-wz1vq Před měsícem

    3:30 LumenPnP when? My hand and eyes hurt just watching all that placement! ( I probably just have a low tolerance though lol)

  • @nihlil
    @nihlil Před měsícem

    Could u check the flux link? it also refers to the syringe page! thx!!

  • @EnzoVince
    @EnzoVince Před měsícem

    Hows the timers and clock speed? Can it runa 60hz hdmi or vga

  • @codebeat4192
    @codebeat4192 Před 20 dny

    Nuts!

  • @aquahood
    @aquahood Před měsícem

    I would love to see a super cluster with the cluster and a 2040 I/O chip?

  • @dolandump
    @dolandump Před měsícem

    Nice e-waste ! Congrats !

  • @ecoer1c
    @ecoer1c Před 29 minutami

    what program do you use to visualize the circuit?