For me, it's the 555 timer. What's your favorite IC?
Integrated Circuits
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Intel i7
AMD bulldozer
7400 series
lmz21701
74LS74AN3
something aesthetic about using not only flip flops but repeating pairs of digits as well
based RISC-V poster
The one that is in you're mom's dildo and let's her turn the vibrations up to 11.
SP0-256. It's the robot voice chip in the speak-and-spell. I'm also really into 4040 binary counters.
this one
t. physicsfag
it completely wrecked atmel overnight
PIC24FJ series. What a comfy line of MCUs.
Runners up:
>OPA2134 dual op amp
>24LC04B EEPROM
iphone
yes
7476
or
the 555 but with this
how do i into electronics? i don't know how electricity works.
Bought a couple of esp32 boards a while ago. Still haven’t done anything with them but had to show my support.
Electronic devices and circuit theory by Robert Boylestad.
this seems like what i was looking for. thank you, user!
>50-150 ppm/°C
hahahahahahahahahaha garbage
This, and LM741
For me it is the pic32mx320h it was a very comfy experience that made me choose embedded systems
Electronics requires way more math&physics than the average amateur like and pretend to think
attiny13A
741 if you've particular needs, otherwise the 358 or 324 packs more in one
MTCH101
Really useful if you want to use touch or proximity input for your project
i like physics and i'm decent at math but electronics is the bane of my existance.
You can get away with very limited knowledge if you use an arduino + modules, but where's the fun in that, physics only really come in to play with higher frequencies where simple circuit models start breaking
74hc595 because i think that was the first ic i thinkered with
Pic12xxx or attiny85 for mcus only because i like to program them with assembly
ATmega32
ESP8266
electronics is what happen when you make some reasonable assumptions for maxwell equations. But I can feel you, as understanding what's going on in circuits isn't straightforward nor intuitive
LM741
What hardware and circuitry and supplies are necessities to learn and become an embedded systems engineer/programmer?
testing some shit rn
op amps and system control theory
LPC1114FN28, ARM Cortex M0, programable via serial no hardware required.
Pretty good for hobbyists.
Learn how a computer/processor works, Patterson and Hennesy wrote a pretty decent book called computer hardware and design. It's good for understanding processors
Learn some digital design(also called digital logic) plus circuit analysis and you will have a pretty solid but basic foundation
Texas Instruments Burr Brown OPA2134PA
Absolutely. 741 is what came to mind after a number of years of not fucking around with hardware.
if you're younger than 50, you guys are what's making electronics still a shit field for virgin autists.
H-bridge
555 is a soi IC