Discussion group dedicated to the Philips LPC2000 family of ARM MCUs
R: Philips ISP Software - Fabio Filippa - Feb 2 6:57:26 2008
http://www.nxp.com/products/microcontrollers/support/software_download/l
pc2000/
Regards
Fabio Filippa
-----Messaggio originale-----
Da: Pont, Michael J. [mailto:M...@tte-systems.com]
Inviato: sabato 2 febbraio 2008 12.38
A: l...@yahoogroups.com
Oggetto: [lpc2000] Philips ISP Software
The latest version of the "Philips" ISP software I can find is from 2004
(and is still labelled Philips).
Anyone know of a later version?
(If not, surely it's time that NXP changed the name at least ..?)
Michael.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

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R: Re: Philips ISP Software - Fabio Filippa - Feb 2 9:58:37 2008
Yes I think v. 2.2.3 is the latest release.
I'm currently using this tool with a LPC2106 microcontroller and this
work well without trouble.
I've see into the last year that this software was updated then I think
the project is still open.
Regards
Fabio Filippa
-----Messaggio originale-----
Da: Pont, Michael J. [mailto:M...@tte-systems.com]
Inviato: sabato 2 febbraio 2008 15.31
A: l...@yahoogroups.com
Oggetto: Re: [lpc2000] Re: Philips ISP Software
From: "ghetto_shinobi"
> I checked out your link and it's version V.2.2.0.
> The one i'm using is V.2.2.3(added support for LPC214X) and i think
> it's the latest version before NXP turned to Flash Magic.
Thanks.
As will be clear, I haven't made much use of ISP for a while (since I
discovered JTAG ...).
It sounds as though the real answer to my question is "Flash Magic". Is
this now considered to be the "standard" (and most up to date) ISP
software?
Michael.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

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RE: Re: Philips ISP Software - Bruce Paterson - Feb 11 19:49:46 2008
> Yes I think v. 2.2.3 is the latest release.
> I'm currently using this tool with a LPC2106 microcontroller
> and this work well without trouble.
I have both flash magic and the phillips tool. They each seem to have
advantages & disadvantages.
Sometimes the Phillips tool has issues with the serial port
(open/close). It doesn't always seem to be repeatable. On the other
hand, if it is working, it seems a fair bit faster than flash magic.
(Of course if you have a new micro variant the Phillips tool doesn't
support then you have to use flash magic or the open source lpc2isp.)
Cheers,
Bruce

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Devices using ARM1136 - Joseph Chan - Feb 11 20:14:58 2008
Hello ARM experts,
Do you know any products/cell phones/PDA/or ?? using
ARM1136 ?
Thanks,
Joseph
____________________________________________________________________________________
Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your home page.
http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs

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RE: Devices using ARM1136 - Paul Curtis - Feb 12 2:42:11 2008
I believe this was covered recently.
Take a look for iMX31 products such as LogicPD's (Freescale's) iMX31 kit and
at www.buglabs.net. I'm sure it's in a lot of phones too.
-- Paul.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: l...@yahoogroups.com [mailto:l...@yahoogroups.com] On
> Behalf Of Joseph Chan
> Sent: 12 February 2008 01:02
> To: l...@yahoogroups.com
> Subject: [lpc2000] Devices using ARM1136
>
> Hello ARM experts,
>
> Do you know any products/cell phones/PDA/or ?? using
> ARM1136 ?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Joseph
>
> _______________________________________________________________________
> _____________
> Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your home page.
> http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs

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Re: Devices using ARM1136 - Andreas Pretzsch - Feb 12 15:47:41 2008
Am Dienstag 12 Februar 2008 02:01 schrieb Joseph Chan:
> Hello ARM experts,
>
> Do you know any products/cell phones/PDA/or ?? using
> ARM1136 ?
See
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARM_architecture
at "ARM11", e.g. Microsoft Zune.
Most common silicon implementation is Freescale i.MX31:
http://www.freescale.com/imx31
--
Andreas Pretzsch email: a...@gmx.de
PGP fingerprint = 5C 98 05 A1 15 0A E5 72 4D 49 CA 2A EC CA 14 07

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