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Well, the thing was I know the board had issues (to say the least) but killing two programmers? One I could believe as it might have been abused before we got hold of it. The second one was fresh out of the box. There are no more in stock at the supplier (Farnell?) didn't want to get too involved. A charge building up on unterminated pins was the only thing I could think of, but it should have been designed out.
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You may have gotten knock off ESP32s. Depending on your distributor there are pirated boards out there.
My client bought 3 Freenove ESP32 WROVER dev boards. One worked.
Get them from mouser or digikey.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Would not supprise me. They only had one board assembled as they didn't have all the components for more than one and that have a load of bits missing.
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I use reference boards straight from Espressif themselves for prototyping. That way I'm not dealing with unknowns like bad hardware. Espressif boards are quality.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Software not ready, incorrect layout (one IC wrong orientation). Data bus running through a board cutout. Certain components not avaiable. No funds for a board respin. Delivery first week of April, Thank I got out before anything happened. I just need to get paid now!
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It sounds like a circus. Wishing you luck there.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Hmm, I think it was a case of 'Oh we can do that, I did a bit of Electronics at Uni' managment by Gant chart. Utter shambles.
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That's funny because that's how I approach everything important, and I didn't go to uni.
Programming, electronics, etc. I tell myself "I can do that" until it becomes true.
But it works for me. It doesn't work for some people.
Real programmers use butterflies
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glennPattonInThePub3 wrote: we blew up two programmers
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
"Hope is contagious"
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ICE, not flesh!
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You: *selects wrong bus time and time again and can't find the problem for two months.*
Also you: "I'm a champion! "
I don't know what you're taking, but I need me some of that
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I wasn't working on it for two months. I just put it down and walked away.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Wouldn't that be visible on a logic analyzer or a scope? I swap things all the time, so I start measuring right away when a SPI or I2C device isn't working.... or an LED, doesn't take more than one GPIO for me to mess it up.
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Not exactly. HSPI vs VSPI doesn't have to do with which pins are being used, but which internal SPI bus is being used inside the chip to drive those pins.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Entrance from a mixed (for example) acapella group (7)
Home internet + work VPN flakey at the moment, so Nopes and YAUTs etc may be delayed
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Nice to see I'm not the only one who has no idea on this one!
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Or directionless crooners?
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Little clue as time is ticking ...
Crooners could be alternative to acapella group.
But I don't see where 'directionless' comes in.
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Think of another word for a crooner, but I don't want tomorrow's so I'm not saying it ...
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I suspect that the clue is poorly written, the parentheses shouldn't be there. Ignoring the parentheses gives the instructions for an anagram. Hopefully not the anagram for 'singers[^]'
INGRESS
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Randor wrote: Hopefully not the anagram for 'singers[^]'
Hopefully, it is the anagram for singers!
The parentheses were to indicate that the text after was one of any number of possible alternatives that could lead to the word 'singers'. I chose 'acapella group' as they explicitly do not have musical instruments so highlighting the singers rather than the songs. As another respondent has suggested, 'crooners' would have done as well.
INGRESS is the correct answer. (An ingress is an entrance and is an anagram of singers)
Especially in UK Health & Safety legislation, ingress and egress are frequently used instead of entrance and exit. In fact, that is where I first came across the word and thought it was an extremely pompous way of saying 'door'.
So, sorry, YAUT
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And "singers" could be directionless crooners (sWingers)...
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I wasn't aware of that one.
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jsc42 wrote: an extremely pompous way of saying 'door'. Except it's not; ingress refers to the act of passing through a door, not the door itself. A door facilitates ingress and egress; a locked door hinders it. Entrance and exit may be nouns but can equally be verbs, unlike ingress and egress.
I've come across "for example" being contentious before, with or without parentheses. I've seen "perhaps" used to convey similar meaning with less ambiguity.
Anyway, as Randor demonstrated, clearly solvable!
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