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PIC16F84a

Sabbatical Report: Updating Microcontrollers

As part of my sabbatical activities I took on the “Temps Pratiques” microcontroller laboratory sessions for electrical engineering and mechatronics students at INSA Strasbourg.  In pre-sabbatical discussions with faculty and staff at INSA Strasbourg I found out that the students were learning using what I considered to be outdated technologies.  The PIC16F84A microcontroller chip used […]

Debugging with Breakpoints: Simulation is not the Real Thing

As my deadline for producing teaching material for the PIC16 boards at INSA Strasbourg approaches, I’m running into real world debugging issues. Now, it’s important to point out that I’m trying to make sure that my teaching material is debugging-focused and provides an opportunity for self-directed learning. The first attempts at running a program on […]

A Simple Program on Three Simple Microcontrollers: Compare and Contrast

Introduction Here we’re going to “kick the tires” on examining a simple example program, using three 8-bit microcontrollers: the classic PIC16F84A, it’s updated cousin found on the Microchip Curiosity Board, the PIC16F1619, and the ATMEGA328P made famous by the Arduino UNO. We’ll be using a “debugging first” approach to programming that is intended to enable students […]