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What to expect from a PIClab Concept.
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Here you will find labs designed by your peers at different universities across the world using PICmicro® MCUs. The labs are designed to teach different embedded design techniques to engineering students
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How To Submit Your Own Lab?
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Are you a professor with a lab that can be shared online? If so, follow this link to learn how to submit a lab. We will post your lab online for others to benefit.
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Available PIClabs:
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| Filesize | Date | | PIC Laboratory Board Manual | (101 K) | 11/1/1998 | | Notes: Author: John B. Peatman, Georgia Tech
A very well thought-out lab, John Pietman's lab is consisted of 9 projects that are intended to provide a framework for putting together an instructional laboratory using a PIC16C74A microcontroller. They make use of Microchip Technology’s new PIC Laboratory Board. They assume that each station of the laboratory consists of a PC for creating and assembling code, either an emulator (preferred) or a programmer and ultraviolet eraser to put assembled code into a PIC chip, and a PIC Laboratory Board. An emulator speeds up the development cycle and gives quicker insight into the sources of bugs in student-generated code. |
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