On Thu, Aug 7, 2014 at 3:00 PM, krasi gichev <krasimirr@gmail.com> wrote:... until you realise that there are around 32 GPIOs needed and
> Firmware update of newer STM32s could be done over USB too - you don't need
> separate UART for this. Just wire BOOT pin (pins) to GPIO(s) from EOMA to
> allow entering firmware update mode (DFU over USB).
> 64pin seems an overkill
around 10 ADCs, then you have I2C, SPI, UART and others, it ends up at
quite a lot of pins.
oo. it doesn't have USB, but it does have SPI, so apart from being a
>- there a lot of other package options, e.g. 48pin
> QFN, not to mention the BGA variants. Also, F103 is quite old one, probably
> the price might be good, but I would recommend some of newer ones (Cortex-M0
> even) - look at F0, F2, F3 series. A good option could be this: STM32F071CB,
> the price goes below $2.50 for 100pcs, and it seems to have all you need -
> http://www.st.com/web/catalog/mmc/FM141/SC1169/SS1574/LN7/PF259662
slight pain (having to write a custom linux kernel driver) it would be
okay.
> SiLabs "Precision 32" are also nice ones - very well balanced peripherals
> and packages (e.g. QFN40, SiM3U154), built in regulator from 5V (if needed).
> But the price is higher.
>
>
> 2014-08-07 12:07 GMT+03:00 Miguel Garcia <gacuest@gmail.com>:
>
>> 2014-08-07 10:13 GMT+02:00 Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton <lkcl@lkcl.net>:
>> > blegh - and you need 2 of them _and_ 2 analog ICs as well. that's
>> > starting to make the STM32F103 (64-pin variant) look attractive. and
>> > i know you can get that at around the $2.50 mark in 10k volumes.
>> >
>> > *sigh* ok do you really need that USB Flash thing? because of a) the
>> > cost (at least $4.50) b) the number of ICs (4) it's starting to tip in
>> > favour of the STM32F again, i get the feeling you'd be better off
>> > wiring up the STM32F as a USB 1.1 device. you'll also need to wire up
>> > the UART to the EOMA68 interface and a couple of other pins to put it
>> > into "firmware upload" mode, but that's ok.
>> >
>> > the advantage there is that i have some GPL'd KiCAD designs with
>> > STM32F already in them (or have found some out there when i last
>> > checked).
>>
>> Yes, the USB flash drive can be removed.
>>
>> I think Daniel also prefers a microcontroller.
>>
>> 2014-08-06 14:18 GMT+02:00 Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton <lkcl@lkcl.net>:
>> > * one GPIO IC IN pin is needed for MicroSD "detect"
>> > * digital GPIO IC OUT pin needed for power-up of LCD
>> > * accelerometer IRQ goes to digital GPIO IC IN
>> > * digital GPIO IC IN pin connects to IRQ-OUT of AXP209
>> > * digital GPIO IC IN pin connects to Headphone-detect (in case you
>> > want to alter volume on headphone-out)
>>
>> So, do we connect all this to STM32F? Or do we have to add the STM32F
>> and the digital GPIO IC?
>>
>> Thanks.
>>
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