AT43USB355E price is u$4.50. I am wondering if it would be an appropiate device to develop a mixing console with +32 knobs (potentiometers). The device has to measure the knobs position (thruough the ADC) and send the values over USB. Is AT43USB355E fast enough to this application? Regards, Jose --- Joel Kolstad <jkolstad71@yahoo.com> escribió: > > > --- In AVR-Chat@yahoogroups.com, Kathy Quinlan > <kat-yahoo@k...> > wrote: > > I have the dev kit for the 355M, but I find it > hard to use due to > lack > > of documentation and example code for beginners, > but I am hopping > that > > after reading Jan ALexson's USB for embedded > design (I think that > is the > > title) I will get a grasb on the subject and be > able to do > something > > useful with them :) > > You'll also want to check out the USB developers > forum > (http://www.usb.org/phpbb/); there's been plenty of > discussion there > about the AT43USB355E (and variants), and Jan > Axelson shows up > occasionally as well. > > I used the AT43USB355E to implement what was > effectively a USB <--> > I2C interface with a few extra bells and whistles > last year. The > problem, at the time, was that the code that comes > with the Atmel > development kit is heavily biased towards building a > human interface > device such as an X-box joystick (this is what the > AT43USB355E was > initally designed by Atmel to do!); they do NOT give > you all the > source code you need to build a 'general purpose' > USB device. > However, if you pester the appropriate people at > Atmel (see the USB > IF forum for details), you CAN get all the source > code except for > one file that contains the functionality of the hub > in the '355E; > Atmel considers this proprietary, and given that no > one else seems > to be handing out hub source code, that seems > reasonable enough. > > Overall, there's a lot more work if you use the > '355E than if you > simply use an FTDI chip. What you gain, however, is > better > throughput (speed) in the system (compared to the > serial FTDI chips) > and the ability to have your USB device looks like > 'whatever you > want it to' rather than 'just' a serial port. > You're also adding > another chip with the FTDI approach, of course. On > the downside, > for the '355E you'll also have to write your own USB > device driver > (highly non-trivial if you haven't done this before, > although there > are toolkits out there that make this a lot easier > if you can afford > them -- we used DriverX USB) unless you make the > '355E look like a > human interface device (HID) -- which pretty much > negates the speed > advantage that you otherwise would have gained. > > Hence, if the FTDI chip will work for your project, > unless you're > going into mass production (where the extra cost of > the FTDI chip > more than pays for the added development costs), or > unless you're > interested in learning a lot about low level USB > (this was my > motivation), it's pretty hard to beat the FTDI > approach. > > BTW, there's a web site out there about a guy who > implements a low > speed (1.5Mbps) USB peripheral strictly via 'bit > banging' the I/O > ports. Once you get done reading Jan's book, you'll > realize just > how impressive that feat is! Interestingly, he did > it using one of > the older devices (this was a couple of years back), > and since then > the newer devices such as the tiny2313 have come out > with faster > clock speeds and more memory that would be even more > attractive for > this purpose. It's a HUGE amount of work to do this > (the guy with > the web site said he spent six months working almost > every night > after work getting to the point where Windows would > recognize his > device), but it'd be a great benefit to the > AVR-using community if > someone did. > > ---Joel Kolstad > > > > > > > > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > AVR-Chat-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com > > > > > > ___________________________________________________________ 250MB gratis, Antivirus y Antispam Correo Yahoo!, el mejor correo web del mundo http://correo.yahoo.com.ar
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Re: [AVR-Chat] Re: USB and ATmega
2005-01-07 by Jose Fuentes
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