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This episode of Spoken Word with Electronics is brought to you by Vareschi Mastering. Visit: https://www.vareschimastering.com/ This episode discusses: The Sketchy Labs Analog Shift Register. Designed by David Dixon, based on the original Serge ASR circuit with slight adjustments for voltage consistency. Show notes, including a tutorial on many of the ideas described: https://boingboing.net/tag/spoken-word-with-electronics (Note: There's a delay with audio posting first, then the article the week following)
This episode of Spoken Word with Electronics is brought to you by Vareschi Mastering. Visit: https://www.vareschimastering.com/ This episode discusses: The Sketchy Labs Analog Shift Register. Designed by David Dixon, based on the original Serge ASR circuit with slight adjustments for voltage consistency. Show notes, including a tutorial on many of the ideas described: https://boingboing.net/tag/spoken-word-with-electronics (There's a delay with audio posting first, then the article the week following)
It's been more than "approximately a week", but instead of keeping to a preset schedule, we choose to bring you only QUALITY CONTENT! Just kidding. This time, I'll talk a bit about choosing shift-registers instead of a big fat MCU, hunting what may be latch-up in my logic-boards, simulating electronic (sub)circuits using SPICE or QUCS, a repair-session at retro-computing place in mid NL, and some non-tech hobby stuff. simulation using Qucs... ...or Ngspice (or any other SPICE incarnation/front-end) a short SPICE3 hacking primer I wrote a while ago (manually type subcircuits and run them through e.g. Ngspice) basic info on latch-up Maker Faire Ruhr (Dortmund) in March 2018