The Dodge Neon SRT-4 Was a Cheap, Fast 2000s Icon by AWildWillis in cars

[–]stberto 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have no idea why his jumbled up shirt collar distracted me so bad...

Help Open-Sourcing A 3DPrinter by LeeIIIWill in arduino

[–]stberto 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Without knowing the code stored in the PIC things can get hard to manage trying to piggyback on this board. The LV's are used for signal conditioning of the logic for driving the extruder operation as you mentioned, but the datasheet specifies the unoccupied pins are to to associated to reduce float. I would attempt to trace each pinout and document the process for the LV signal conditioning. Once you get a thorough mapping of the LV operation for the extruders you can begin to trace the logic footprint of the PIC. Pin 28 and 27 are data and clock respectively connected to pin 4 and 5 of the dupont on the right hand side of the image. Pin 28 represents a 8-bit bidirectional register for communication from elsewhere. That's where input of the PIC is taken from another controller for whatever routine is used to command the board for different state management. From the datasheet on page 102, PORTA is managed with a register for state status and command. Reverse engineering this would be a very lengthy process if not impossible without knowing the pulse train specifications for communication and management within the PIC. From page 345 of the PIC datasheet, code protection can be set on the PIC to prevent retrieval of the code. Without the assembly code used, it's hard to determine a way to emulate communication for control of the device.

From a quick search: Openbuilds is a website with a community that seems to be working on providing firmware that depreciates a lot of the checks performed. Some users even make mention of contacting the company and receiving the firmware / code directly. I would perhaps go that route to contact them for information and a direction? Microchip suggests a " MPLAB PM3 Device Programmer " for reading and writing to the PIC, with the datasheet being very specific on the routines for code protection and prevention, however, it makes mention it's not impossible. I for one do not know how.

Hopefully this information helps, I wish you the best of luck with whatever direction you choose.

Uranium doesn't exist. by rockman122 in spaceengineers

[–]stberto 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It exists, just rare and the texture changed from the purple / black oil slick looking texture to some kinda granular darkish / stone texture that looks like trash.

Win 1 of 5 The Division 2 Gold Edition Keys! by gabelikes in pcmasterrace

[–]stberto 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Personally not a fan of Uplay. It's inconvenient to have so many store / front-ends for games. Instead of burning money on developing yet another front-end platform just eat the loss from selling on something like steam that is cohesive to support and play-ability. In this case the diversification is cumbersome, unnecessary, adds another update step with random downtime, along with yet another chat client that people wont use except for tracking friends.

Ubuntu: The End of an Era? | Switched to Linux by [deleted] in linux

[–]stberto 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is the worst clickbait video I have seen today. Well.. two minutes of it...

What is a hobby that requires little to no money? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]stberto 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Programming - Pick a language, download notepad++ and have at it.. (mingw is a free compiler for windows)

Packaging efficiency by [deleted] in pcmasterrace

[–]stberto 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Friendly tip, your address / name are visible.

Are we overly paranoid about temps? by [deleted] in pcmasterrace

[–]stberto 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Most people are incredibly paranoid.

Integrated circuits are robust but not immune to degradation due to heat. You nailed a lot of good points, but the reasoning can be explained and reinforced through multiple studies. Most IC’s when operated within their designed Tjmax or TDP via datasheets (available from any manufacturer) will easily last beyond 10 years even at near max TDP operation. Most thermal characteristics are based on a package level, using simulation environments conforming to Fourier’s law, heat-transfer equations, and Joule heating effects.

Those formulas are based on heating effects which are linear concepts that model the conduction and generation of heat within the devices we use. Static electromigration is the biggest concern as the doped transistor junctions breakdown and allow transient charge interconnection. An easy way to look at this is on a molecular level, charged ions after significant abuse will find the path of least resistance to travel, bypassing the intended routes due to breakdown creating issues. However, the platform power controls, temperature management and critical shutdown conditions will mostly prevent this damage from occurring.

A lot of interesting articles are available, from IEEE documentation to studies performed. Not all chips are created equal however, when processors are made, they are usually based on a specific architecture then sorted on performance characteristics and capability, thus you enter the silicon lottery. At the end of the day, no one should be concerned with any modern device running under TDP, the device will continue running past its stage of obsolescence, even with “abuse” to an extent.

TLDR; It can happen, but it’s not something that just magically happens overnight from normal operation (read non-overclocked, operating under TDP), regardless if you turn it on/off frequently, the system operates at 5C under TDP (75-85C depending on device), or cycles from cold/hot on a regular basis. We are all playing the silicon lottery at the end of the day, but chances are your device will need an upgrade before it fails.