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  2. ZX Interface 2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZX_Interface_2

    Each joystick direction switch and the fire switch replicate a keypress on the Spectrum keyboard. This differs from the then-popular Kempston Interface, whose joystick switches are separate to the keyboard and read using a Z80 IN 31 instruction. Player 1 is mapped to 6– 0 and player 2 is mapped to 1– 5.

  3. Kempston Micro Electronics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kempston_Micro_Electronics

    Kempston joystick interface Kempston Interface plugged into a Spectrum Plus ZX Spectrum Kempston Joystick Interface with 3 ports and cartridge slot. The Kempston Interface is a joystick interface used on the ZX Spectrum series of computers that allows controllers complying with the de facto Atari joystick port standard (using the DE-9 connector) to be used with the machine.

  4. List of Arduino boards and compatible systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Arduino_boards_and...

    BBFuino come with the ATmega328 controller, loaded with Optiboot (Arduino UNO's bootloader), compatible with Arduino IDE and sample code, design to fit breadboard for prototyping and learning, lower down the cost by taking out the USB to UART IC, so the board has the basic component to operate.

  5. Arduino - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arduino

    An initial alpha preview of a new Arduino IDE was released on October 18, 2019, as the Arduino Pro IDE. The beta preview was released on March 1, 2021, renamed IDE 2.0. On September 14, 2022, the Arduino IDE 2.0 was officially released as stable. [66] The system still uses Arduino CLI (Command Line Interface), but improvements include a more ...

  6. ZX Interface 1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZX_Interface_1

    The ZX Interface 1, launched in 1983, was a peripheral from Sinclair Research for its ZX Spectrum home computer. Originally intended as a local area network interface for use in school classrooms, it was revised before launch to also act as the controller for up to eight ZX Microdrive high-speed tape-loop cartridge drives.

  7. AVR microcontrollers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AVR_microcontrollers

    8-bit AVR XMEGA devices via the PDI 2-wire interface; 8-bit megaAVR and tinyAVR devices via SPI for all with OCD (on-chip debugger) support; 8-bit tinyAVR microcontrollers with TPI support; 32-bit SAM Arm Cortex-M based microcontrollers via SWD; Target operating voltage ranges of 1.62V to 5.5V are supported as well as the following clock ranges:

  8. Joystick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joystick

    Possible elements of a video game joystick: 1. stick, 2. base, 3. trigger, 4. extra buttons, 5. autofire switch, 6. throttle, 7. hat switch (POV hat), 8. suction cups. A joystick, sometimes called a flight stick, is an input device consisting of a stick that pivots on a base and reports its angle or direction to the device it is controlling.

  9. Analog stick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analog_stick

    Cromemco JS-1 analog joystick, the first known for microcomputers. Shortly after the introduction of the first microcomputers, Cromemco introduced a S-100 bus card containing an analog-to-digital converter, and shortly after, a card with two of these and an associated analog joystick, the JS-1. This is the first known example of such a device ...