FI programming geek question, what chips do they use? |
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FI programming geek question, what chips do they use? |
need4speed |
Nov 10 2003, 02:22 PM
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Member Group: Members Posts: 339 Joined: 11-April 03 From: Arroyo Grande, CA Member No.: 564 |
I'm still a drooler, but I may have my first 914 in a couple of weeks if things work out.
And I'm already dreaming of building my own FI system (though the car I'm looking at is a 1.8 with what the owner says is a good, working L-Jet system). And I'm wondering - has anybody ever seen an FI brain that uses an FPGA chip, instead of a regular chip designed for the task? A buddy of mine works at Xylinx, and he explained to me about these FPGA chips - mostly used in routers and stuff - it's basically a big array of programmable gates, and you can load a program on by physically configuring the gates a certain way, and then, instead of loading software in to run on the chip - the chip works as if it's a custom designed IC. I kind of thought I'd like to try using something like this - I'm not a really experienced programmer, but I have worked with computers for 12 years, and I've always wanted to take on a project like this. Any thoughts? |
SirAndy |
Nov 11 2003, 12:48 PM
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Resident German Group: Admin Posts: 41,669 Joined: 21-January 03 From: Oakland, Kalifornia Member No.: 179 Region Association: Northern California |
QUOTE(jkeyzer @ Nov 11 2003, 08:22 AM) Andy - Did you ever code on the Amiga? I did not know you were such a hard core programmer. ASM, wow. :worship: nope, i missed the whole amiga hype (IMG:style_emoticons/default/cool.gif) played some good games on them tho. started out with a TRS-80 (anyone here remember those?) in '78. then went on to the C64. did alot of ASM on that one, completely redid the kernel, shrank it to 2/3 (without loosing any functionality), then adding my own code. added a assembler/disassembler and other "tools" to the kernel. made cracking games a piece of cake (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smile.gif) then on to the early PCs. then MAC. then SUN Spark. then (insert a lot of crap here .....) after all these years, assembler code is still my favorite, Andy |
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