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Starting in electronics 47 years ago, digital electronics clicked for me in a way that analog didn’t. My early analog circuits often used digital components to create clear deterministic behavior. The 7400 was my do everything black box and the 555 was the timer of choice when it became available.

But I always dreamed of a digital future. When I was very young, microprocessors fascinated but intimidated me with their need for special support chips, and I would design 4 bit computers I couldn’t afford to build using 7400 logic and 4 bit SRAM.

For a while, I strayed from the path and learned to program on my C2-8P computer that my brother and I bought. By middle school, I was more or less distracted, and came back to technology later with the TS1000 and later the c64. Eventually, the AT2323 brought me back into electronics with MCUs, and I found it was the world I always fantasised about as a 7 year old kid designing 4 bit ALUs. I don’t know why I missed out on the early PIC days, but I think it was girls, cars, and LSD, mostly lol.

Anyway, since then, I’ll unashamedly put a 6 pin mcu in just to flash a light, but I’ll make it flash in a better way, so that it grabs your attention when it is starting or stopping flashing, for example. Or it will flash in a way that communicates just a little more about what it’s telling you. I find with MCUs your stuff can be just a little bit better in a thousand subtle ways, and despite 10000x the parts count, more reliable and resistant to environmental factors. With modern mixed-signal MCUs that can drive 60ma on a GPIO, most things can boil down to a single chip with a few external parts.

Then you get to stuff like the esp32 platform, where for $1 you get a single chip solution that puts my first 486 PC to shame playing DOOM, even while bit-banging the video output. There’s no point in using something less capable unless you are making more than a thousand units, in which case you can still end up with a $0.10 risc-V running a respectable 24 mhz at 32 bits, with more flash and ram than my old C2-8P.




The esp32 is amazing. It has a flexible IP block that can create complex patterns on gpio without the cpu needing to bit bang. You can use one core for the ip stack and the other for example for running micropython scripts. Its the 555 of today, a million times.


> By middle school, I was more or less distracted, and came back to technology later

Lol this also happened to me, I wonder how common this is?


I’d imagine pretty common, at least back when it was uncool to be a “nerd”. Hormones are a powerful drug, and at least until I figured out what it was all about, girls were way more fascinating than electronics.

Sex derails the potential of young humans in so many ways, yet the process of reproduction is so arduous that it makes sense that we’d end up wired to prioritise it heavily. All it would take is for young people to wise up and we’d be extinct within a century and a half lol.

We’re seeing the results of not valuing the labor that is creating a home and raising children in systematic rapid population decline. (Which might seem ok, but in most situations, it is socioeconomicly catastrophic)

We need to learn to overtly value the huge labor sink investment that motherhood , fatherhood, and family stewardship entail.

There are things more valuable to humanity than the ability to concentrate wealth and power at the expense and to the exclusion of others.

The whole drive to concentrate wealth and power is fundamentally based on sex anyway. It seems a great poverty to not acknowledge and socially celebrate the skills, labours, and sacrifices of parenthood.




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