"Personally, I don't think neither the PIC or the AVR 8 bit MCUs measures up to what Freescale/Motorola has to offer but I just don't find many if any programmers using it."
Volume is no indication of quality
Thats because most Freescale programmers are professionals.
Ask Ford, GM and BMW. I would imagine they have plenty of programmers using them.
But since professionals have already paid their dues, you don't see them on the forums asking
newbie questions (not that there is anything wrong with asking questions, but you should take the
time to study the field, do some research and a bit of reading) Many of the "programmers" you
are talking about are hobbyists. Again, nothing wrong with that, but that is the truth.
Freescale has a large University program as well.
You can down load CW, 32K limit for free. This is a professional grade IDE, as a free gift.
This tool has a learning curve, as do most high end tools, but once you learn it your
productivity will be high.
You have this forum where you can directly talk to Freescale engineers.
Even if you don't buy CW, you can still put in support requests.
Did you even look at DEMOJM? This board is sold at a loss. Most other P&E BDMs are 250.00.
Show me a PIC or AVR board at this price that is this good.
Do you really expect Freescale to make chips for hobbyists?
Pinch yourself. I think you are dreaming.
Freescale welcomes hobbyists here, and anyone here would help you, but Freescale
is a business and has to make money. I am just trying to point out the reality of the situation.
You are not being realistic.
Order 100k Pieces and you might get the package you want. (of course it wouldn't be PDIP if you were making 100K boards).
They will post a loss this year because their biggest single customer blew it, but not because there was anything wrong with their chips.
These chips are for high end applications, which means the volume is lower, and the prices are
a bit higher. But for what you are doing these prices are nothing - you only need a few chips.
You get what you pay for.
Apple moved to intel, because consumers what cheap, yet Microsoft (Intels bedfellow), Sony and Nintendo picked powerpc for their game systems. Why do you think that is?
Go ahead, cut your teeth on AVR, twist your mind on PIC an 8051, and then when you are ready try Freescale. If this is just your hobby and you have no plans on becoming a professional, then maybe Freescale is not the right choice for you. I don't know what other hobbies you have but compared to Golf or Scuba diving, this is pretty cheap.
If you decide to use Freescale this forum will be here to help you out.
Message Edited by JimDon on
2008-02-26 12:22 AM