Wrapping Up Another Year of Blogging.
Just an update on where I am and why the blog posts slowed down. … More Wrapping Up Another Year of Blogging.
Just an update on where I am and why the blog posts slowed down. … More Wrapping Up Another Year of Blogging.
I have another RTFM (Read the Manual) story to share: Ever see a diagram and think “what the heck is going on here?” I’ve spent a lot of time developing code for SPI devices or devices that utilize some form of shift register input. This is the first time in a while that I’ve seen … More A Confusing Timing Diagram
Content curation! How do you cope with evolutionary documents? When do you clean up old wiki pages?
Today’s update is about my switch to curation/edit mode on my website, rather than blogging, for the next few weeks. Clean up is something we all stall on doing, but for me, the time to tidy is now. … More Content Curation!
At dinner on Sunday, an old friend and I were discussing recent issues and anomlies we’e encountered with the I2C bus.
I’ve made a note of them on my blog to help familiarize others with some of the more abstract and uncommon issues on I2C buses. … More Three, new to me, I2C issues!
A follow-up on my last post about semantic line breaks, or semantic linefeeds. … More More on Semantic Linebreaks/Linefeeds.
Last night GitBooks completely garbled my paragraphs because I’d added new lines in the middle of my paragraphs. Something that I always do, but last night it went very wrong. … More Semantic Line Breaks
A short post to announce the soft launch of a book I’ve been writing. … More Am I now a published author?
A teaser of upcoming technical posts on my blog. … More Upcoming Technical Content
What you see is what you get. A Helpful Tool There is a helpful type of text editing tool known as a WYSIWYG editor. They have been around so long that most of us don’t know that we used to do things in other ways. Microsoft Word is a great example. You type in text, … More WYSIWYG? An Apology.
This is an adventure in debugging.
I recently encountered a bug in a very simple walking-ones test. It was near the end of the data, so it looked like an off-by-one bug; closer inspection told me otherwise. … More What feels like an off-by-one-bug, but isn’t?