If you have a Samsung S5610k phone that is stuck on the logo or restarts randomly, you may need to flash it with a new firmware. Flashing is the process of installing a new software on your phone's memory, which can fix some software issues and improve the performance of your phone. However, flashing can also be risky and may damage your phone if not done properly. Therefore, you should always backup your data before flashing and follow the instructions carefully.
In this article, we will show you how to flash Samsung S5610k with Flash Loader 7.5.3 V0.6 Lite, which is a tool that can flash your phone via USB cable. You will also need the firmware file for your phone, which is a compressed file with the extension .rar. You can download the flasher and the firmware from the links below:
I need an API to talk to an old TMS320F206 DSP (C20 family). We have CC 4.10.36 and a validated .out file ready to be flashed to the device. I have heard of a utility that does this but it only under windows 3.1.
We have a XDS510 PP but have never tried to use it to directly program the TMS320F206 or to compile the programs ... just load symbols and modest debug. We never did find a satisfactory solution to the non-volatility of the flash memory .... perhaps the sdflash you mention was that "missing link."
We also have a XDS510PC that we have used for flashing (and also progarmming for the C203); this method runs file prg2xx.exe or the newer prg2xxw95.exe. The write up I have from TI, TMX320F206 JTAG Based Flash Programmer Rev 2.0 states that it is compatible with Windows 95 only; I have been unable to get it to run on Win 2000 even though the XDS itself does.
The problem is, on most sites on the web, there are background images. They take time to load. Ordinarily, it wouldn't be a problem if the images were optimized, and small enough. However, on some of my sites, the javascript files find their way to load before anything else on the page, even though they're in the footer! This creates a white "flash" before the background image loads. Why is my javascript loading first before anything else? I'm having this problem on many sites, and I see it everywhere. Here's the site I'm currently working on:
tl;dr How can I defer loading of javascript on my websites so that the background image loads before anything else, thus preventing that white "flash" before the browser finishes downloading the image.
I wanted to add something, in case of having a black background image set for the body. I was experimenting with transitions in between pages in the same site. I finally used this (neatly loads black-background from black, avoiding the flash yeah!):
I would use a query string "?201611" on the image URL in css.This tells the browser which version of the image to load. So instead of checking for new version every time, it will load the version kept in cache. The flash effect will happens only the first time the website is visited.
Which board is it and what flash is it using? If it is a parallel flash, you should be able to upload a parallel flash loader ( _pfl.pdf) image into the FPGA using the Quartus programmer, and then if you do a new autodetect, it should show you the flash with options to read/write/erase it. I don't use parallel flashes myself so I don't know the exact procedure, I just know it is possible.
secondly, on this website, it says "After HDK reset, the start-up code copies the Flash API of boot loader from flash to SRAM, and execute the boot loader in Flash. " is this necessary ? why I need to do this? (what happened if I ignore this) and most importantly how to do this?
There are many ways to accomplish this. It depends on if you want the code copied into reserved RAM every time the device starts executing or if you want to overlay this part of RAM only when the bootloader is needed. Read section 8.8 of the ARM Assembly Language Tools User's Guide and see if that helps you get started.
2. the api fucntion return value Fapi_StatusType is not accurate, in the demo you can see the fucntion return value is not used to determine if this fucntion works, it check the registers, and this method is highly recommanded by me, because, even you failed to program the flash, the return value is Fapi_Status_Success,but the register is not in a stable status.
i have only some vhdl code, i have written this code in quartus, but in the help they say to use flash programmer for a non-volatile configuration. so i jus use a hello_world project to have a project but i dont cate about what this program does. i just want to load my .sof file.
2. When the Programming File Conversion tool says, the design doesn't match the flash device, although the (compressed) sof is smaller than device capacity, you most likely forgot to set the compression switch in the conversion tool under (sof) input file properties. Having an compressed or uncompressed input file doesn't matter, this option has to be set in the tool a new.
I expected, that you are accessing EPCS through JTAG cause you are converting to jic format. In this case a particular SFL (serial flash loader) Megafunction would been included to your design (hopefully). I reported a case where this megafunction wasn't operational although included correctly to the design. But I'm not sure about your design, but I can't imagine how the EPCS design could be programmed through JTAG without having a serial flash loader.
Yes, the DSP Dev Kit is using a parallel flash rather than an EPCS, I wasn't aware of that fact. The standard PFL programming file would use a *.pof type instead of *.jic for serial flash loader, but I don't know what's the NIOS II flow.
On Thursday past, the organizers of the Bahamas International Literary Festival (BILF), a new-brand entity, so new it don't even have itself a webspace yet, held a literary forum that served as a precursor to the festival. Six Bahamian writers were invited to present on the topic The Role of the Writer in Society. I was privileged to be among them. The others were: Keith RussellObediah Michael SmithAlex MorleyIan Strachan... Who? who'm I forgetting? Or can't I count? ... I don't think I can count ... there were only five of us! Gah!Well, anyhow. The evening was memorable for a couple of reasons. The first was the size of the audience. It filled almost the entire length of the upper floor of Chapter One Bookstore, much to my amazement. Now I know it's entirely possible, even likely, that a good chunk of the attendees were students who had no choice in the matter, whose classes were meeting there, who might even have an assignment about the topic later on. But that didn't stop the fact that there were, oh, maybe fifty or sixty people in attendance from making me hold the event in awe. Writers in this country are not used to such interest. At least I'm not.Just for posterity's sake, and because it might be of interest, and because I've been toying with the concept of podcasting for some time and thought this is on the way to creating one, below's an updated version of the presentation I gave. It's not exactly the same because Thursday was a runaround day and I wasn't able to get all the quotations I wanted for the presentation, but it's 90% similar. The comment box is on, for feedback's sake, if people are so inclined.[youtube= =VITJjobWLyU&w=425&h=350]So I'm not an purist when it comes to writing. Art for art's sake, as Achebe said, being somewhat of a myth. I don't necessarily believe that all art has to have a function, a purpose; the kind of art that does isn't really art, as it puts emotions and empathy second to function. But on the other hand, as Ian Strachan, who spoke last, said of writing -- whatever you think about it, the act of writing is always a political act. One needn't be a socialist (as Alex Morley is) for that to be true; you just need to write, and to share your writing with people beyond yourself. In fact, each of us spoke about agency and writing and change and revolution of some kind. Revelation, said one of us (don't remember which one -- if you're reading this, own it, Keith or Ian or Obie or Alex!) is revolution. If you don't know my name, said Obie, channelling Baldwin, you don't know your own. (Obie read an essay which meandered through various meditations about writers and society and kept coming back to just that -- if you don't know my name, you don't know your own.) Write for change, said Alex. Write to tell the truth. Write to show ourselves ourselves. Write to make a difference, said Keith. Write to tell the truth.We talked a lot about truth and difference and change among us, each of us in our own particular way. So it's no coincidence that I'm going to post the next video here now. Chris Abani talked about story and the power of telling a tale, the power of telling the truth, and somebody filmed him doing so. Watch the video below to see what he said. It's akin to what we said, only (forgive me, colleagues) better.
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