You might have an easier time getting a JW version of an older 18C chip and removing the casing to take a picture. A common megapixel digital camera with macro ought to be able to produce enough detail for a small poster. I don't beleive there would be any legal problems - I don't know what the law is, but I doubt you can copyright images someone else takes of your product or prevent such images from being taken. Except, perhaps, in the digital realm where an 'image' of a music CD may contain a working copy of the music... -Adam Philip Pemberton wrote: >In message <000601c4592f$aae11830$0b00a8c0@PAARD> > Wouter van Ooijen wrote: > > > >>I would love a poster with the 14-bit instruction set, or die >>photographs, or anything else I can put in the classroom where I will >>give some PIC-programming courses. I asked an MC representative but he >>said they had nothing like this. >> >> >A poster showing a photo of the entire PIC18F452 or PIC16F877 die would be >nice. Maybe put an instruction set list for both chips underneath, along with >pinouts for the 18, 28 and 40-pin PICs. >If someone can get a few hi-res die photos off Microchip, I'd be happy to see >about designing something like that. >That, or if someone happens to have some PICs in bare-dice format and a >decent microscope/camera arrangement... I guess you'd have to get permission >off Microchip first though, seeing as it is their chip. > >Later. >-- >Phil. | Acorn Risc PC600 Mk3, SA202, 64MB, 6GB, >philpem@dsl.pipex.com | ViewFinder, 10BaseT Ethernet, 2-slice, >http://www.philpem.dsl.pipex.com/ | 48xCD, ARCINv6c IDE, SCSI >... See that potti, That's your tower system that is. > >-- >http://www.piclist.com hint: The PICList is archived three different >ways. See http://www.piclist.com/#archives for details. > > > > > -- http://www.piclist.com hint: To leave the PICList mailto:piclist-unsubscribe-request@mitvma.mit.edu