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Full Discussion: Jack Kilby dead at 81
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Jack Kilby dead at 81 Post 75869 by tmarikle on Wednesday 22nd of June 2005 03:20:06 PM
Old 06-22-2005
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kelam_Magnus
Uh dude... y2k is gone already Smilie

And besides... I never heard of anyone having problems with any appliances or stereos back then anyway.
Nor me, that was sort of a tongue-and-cheek comment on the gross over reaction to everything embedded that was certainly doomed to fail at the turn of the century. Smilie I don't know about you but I knew many who believed the sensationalism sold by some authors on the subject. I never could get some of them to calm down and listen to reason; we were too reliant on technology after all...so they believed.

My son's electronics kit has IC chips now; I feel sort of cheated with the one that my parents gave me.
 
I2CDETECT(8)						      System Manager's Manual						      I2CDETECT(8)

NAME
i2cdetect - detect I2C chips SYNOPSIS
i2cdetect [-y] [-a] [-q|-r] i2cbus [first last] i2cdetect -F i2cbus i2cdetect -V i2cdetect -l DESCRIPTION
i2cdetect is a userspace program to scan an I2C bus for devices. It outputs a table with the list of detected devices on the specified bus. i2cbus indicates the number or name of the I2C bus to be scanned, and should correspond to one of the busses listed by i2cdetect -l. The optional parameters first and last restrict the scanning range (default: from 0x03 to 0x77). i2cdetect can also be used to query the functionalities of an I2C bus (see option -F.) WARNING
This program can confuse your I2C bus, cause data loss and worse! INTERPRETING THE OUTPUT
Each cell in the output table will contain one of the following symbols: o "--". The address was probed but no chip answered. o "UU". Probing was skipped, because this address is currently in use by a driver. This strongly suggests that there is a chip at this address. o An address number in hexadecimal, e.g. "2d" or "4e". A chip was found at this address. OPTIONS
-y Disable interactive mode. By default, i2cdetect will wait for a confirmation from the user before messing with the I2C bus. When this flag is used, it will perform the operation directly. This is mainly meant to be used in scripts. -a Force scanning of non-regular addresses. Not recommended. -q Use SMBus "quick write" commands for probing (by default, the command used is the one believed to be the safest for each address). Not recommended. This is known to corrupt the Atmel AT24RF08 EEPROM found on many IBM Thinkpad laptops. -r Use SMBus "read byte" commands for probing (by default, the command used is the one believed to be the safest for each address). Not recommended. This is known to lock SMBus on various write-only chips (most notably clock chips at address 0x69). -F Display the list of functionalities implemented by the adapter and exit. -V Display the version and exit. -l Output a list of installed busses. SEE ALSO
i2cdump(8), sensors-detect(8) AUTHOR
Frodo Looijaard, Mark D. Studebaker and Jean Delvare This manual page was originally written by Aurelien Jarno <aurel32@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system. April 2008 I2CDETECT(8)
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