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That's interesting, I can't imagine how they can make it so small.. The arm7 cpu on my project is for a pinball machine sound board, so there's no DOK on it.
> Dumb suggestion - I know nothing about ARM, but I know that the x86 bootstrap > code that exists in some disk boot sectors, has "do nothing" code in it, but it > serves as a binary byte signature, when read as data. > > Could the code sequence that you are describing, possibility serve in the same > manner? Just a thought. > > > Edit: I just learned something the other day - many of those so-called "USB > flash drive" devices, use something called "DiskOnKey", which was apparently > developed by a company called "M-Systems". Anyways, the newest DOK2.0 devices, > the so-called "T4" ones, use an ARM7-based 32-bit CPU on them! In those tiny > little packages. Hard to believe that those USB flash drives have nearly the > equivalent power as a GBC in them. (Too bad there's no video-output. :P) > > Anyways, does your project have anything to do with ARM7-based DOK devices at > all? Just curious, after learning about this. I own one of these (a PNY 512MB > USB2.0 model), and was wondering what you could do with one of these things, if > you could run your own assembly code on them. >
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