Hi, Brendan Moran wrote: >So, while looking for a usb micro, I came across another solution. >National makes two USB peripherals with part numbers USBN9603 >(http://www.national.com/pf/US/USBN9603.html) and USBN9604 >(http://www.national.com/pf/US/USBN9604.html). >They both contain the full requirements for connection at high speed to the >USB, the 9604 is for bus powered operation, and the 9603 is for self >powered operation. They both run off of 24MHz crystals. > >These are devices that connect much the way a memory would. They connect >either in serial mode, via SPI, or in parallel mode, with an 8-bit bus. > >Looks to me like a simple solution for how to get a PIC onto USB. > >Of course writing the subsequent driver is another question entirely, but >it is an easy way to handle the hardware with primarily existing components. Well one's milage may wary depedning on the purpose of thew usb i/f but for me I think the absolute best solution is to use one of the FTDI chip's then there's no need to worry about drivers rtc. ( they're included ). Also fairly cheap ( <5$). Look at: http://www.ftdichip.com/ Really awsome, serial (aka RS232) or parallel versions, protoboard etc. Neat critters. /Tony -- http://www.piclist.com hint: The list server can filter out subtopics (like ads or off topics) for you. See http://www.piclist.com/#topics