On 9/2/2012 1:30 PM, John Larkin wrote:
> On Sun, 2 Sep 2012 10:44:51 -0500, "Tim Williams"
> <
tmor...@charter.net> wrote:
>
>> "Joerg"<inv...@invalid.invalid> wrote in message
>> news:aah7ou...@mid.individual.net...
>>> They hold 21,000 of them right now. Is that not enough stock? :-)
>>
>> Weird, I had found the PC457L0NIT0F, which has the exact same datasheet,
>> which is the -P0F, not -T0F.
>>
>> Digikey has 23k and change of the -NIP0F, and 58k and change of
>> the -YIP0F, which is VDE marked. Again, same datasheet and link.
>>
>> Now I want to know what the hell is the difference! Nothing about part
>> numbering in the datasheet. Sharp's website isn't helpful; datasheet
>> specifies "corresponding Optoelectronic Application Notes", but there are
>> none listed under this product type. And their listing shows the
>> 45*6*L0NIP0F, but only the 457 -YIP0F.
>>
>> Tim
>
> Doncha just hate a data sheet that covers several different parts
> without saying what's different about them?
As long as you've opened the data sheet gripe door, the other day I was
looking for LCD capable MCUs and Freescale has a line of nice ones.
Trouble is they put out a data book for each *package* variant! The LCD
controller has access to fewer or more pins depending on the package.
Ok, so I have to look in three data books to find which one will meet my
needs... everywhere I find a reference to the number of LCD pins
supported, the footnote refers me to the pin out section. In the pinout
section they refer me to... the pinout section! I guess the info is in
the pin list if I want to track down and count some 40+ signals in the
multiplexed IO lists.
I write to Freescale support and they seem to have moved to the other
half of the world. Every reply takes a full day, often sent in the wee
hours of the morning and clearly shows they don't understand my
question. After four attempts to get them to find me the info of LCD
pins vs. package I get the counts I asked for. Finally I got them to
understand they might want to add this to the data sheets rather than
expect the user to wade through the pinout lists.
Does it really save Freescale money to move support to a third world
country if they spend four times as much effort answering a question? I
won't even try to understand why they publish a separate data book for
every package of a part.
Rick