Framework-Laptop-13
debugprobe
Framework-Laptop-13 | debugprobe | |
---|---|---|
12 | 9 | |
1,434 | 671 | |
1.7% | 4.9% | |
3.2 | 7.3 | |
13 days ago | 13 days ago | |
OpenSCAD | C | |
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 | - |
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Framework-Laptop-13
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Review: Framework Laptop finally gets an AMD Ryzen config–and it’s pretty good
You definitely could. All the details are available on the FrameworkComputer github org and you could either use what they have as a basis for a chassis or design your own custom chassis that fits the framework parts.
https://github.com/FrameworkComputer/Framework-Laptop-13
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Raspberry Pi 5
You can also buy mainboards[1] and expansion cards[2] (usb-c, hdmi etc.) from the same website. Depending on how beefy of a computer you want there are mainboards from 299 USD to 700 USD. So for ~500 USD you can get a very powerful tiny-ish computer. It obviously won't have the IO capabilities of pi-like hobby boards but it'll function great as a thin client for running linux / home automation stuff.
[1]: https://frame.work/marketplace/mainboards
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Where is everyone selling old framework mainboards/parts?
Framework themselves do sell older mainboards at a discount.
- Mainboard operation
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A Framework Laptop Hacking Story
So if this isn't the EC firmware flash, where is that? I peeked under all the components on the top side of the board that I could (fan, etc.) but couldn't find any other flash chips. I tried looking at the schematic, and while it mentions two flash ROMs, it doesn't mention where to find them. Reluctantly, I took out the mainboard and checked the under-side.
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Looking for a portable computer similar to steam deck or rog ally for AR glasses
You can also buy a framework mainboard. It’s basically the motherboard of a laptop without screen, keyboard and trackpad.
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How I feel about framework
And I don't mean ideologically, though that's good too. Their top end AMD Ryzen 7 main board upgrade kit is $700 and that's what you'd pay for a mid range business laptop. Add $40 for a mainboard case which basically gets you a new computer and it's not a bad deal at all.
- What’s your favorite laptop brand and model for yourself?
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5000€ Laptop from 2007
What I don't get about your comments is that you're opposing upgradeability and repairability, when it's really just the same concept stretched further: instead of there being one spare part for anything that can break in a given model, you have multiple tiers for parts that effectively make the laptop more of a modular series than a single model, like Framework does. And to answer your question from a further comment, you can indeed upgrade to a later gen mainboard, in fact you can even go AMD.
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PC form factors (concept)
If you are still looking for a place to start you should check out framework's github. They have a bunch of 3d models already designed. You can modify them and framework even has a process to submit possible upgrades for their designs. https://github.com/FrameworkComputer/Framework-Laptop-13
debugprobe
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A Framework Laptop Hacking Story
use the JECDB header to connect a SWD probe like a Picoprobe and debug the firmware
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J-Link replacement with Raspberry Pi Pico?
Can Raspberry Pi Pico replace J-Link? I saw PicoProbe project, installed and wired for it, but pyocd stucks with "Waiting for a debug probe to be connected..." and nRF Connect Programmer fails with error "Unsupported device. The detected device could not be recognized as neither JLink device nor Nordic USB device."
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Help debugging RP2040 using J-Link and OpenOCD
Even once you've got that handled, though, I'm not sure the JLink will be able to connect. The RP2040 uses a somewhat uncommon variant on SWD to communicate with its two cores; not all debug probes support this. If you can't get the JLink to work and you have a spare Pi Pico around, you can use the Picoprobe firmware to turn the extra Pi into a DAPlink-compatible debug probe.
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New Product from Raspberry Pi: Raspberry Pi Debug Probe: a plug-and-play debug kit for $12
That's cool, but does it do anything you can't already do with just another Pico running picoprobe? (like this)
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rp2040, boot from ram(no flash), swd
I need to boot rp2040 from ram (no flash), which I have tested with the picotool (with USB) and picoprobe (with swd+gdb load) and I can boot from ram and flashing a LED.
- building opened for apple Mac m1
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Anyway to use a RP pico as an stlink clone?
Yes -- the Picoprobe firmware is what you're after.
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What're my debugging options without a raspberry pi?
And here's the repo for the picoprobe software: https://github.com/raspberrypi/picoprobe
What are some alternatives?
FullPageOS - A raspberrypi distro to display a full page browser on boot
pico-debug - virtual debug pod for RP2040 "Raspberry Pi Pico" with no added hardware
UsbAsp-flash - Program allow you to program flash memory on the protocols spi, I2C, MicroWire. Supports CH341a, UsbAsp, AVRISP(LUFA), Arduino, FT232H.
cortex-debug - Visual Studio Code extension for enhancing debug capabilities for Cortex-M Microcontrollers
ExpansionBay - CAD and documentation for the Expansion Bay module system in the Framework Laptop 16
EmbeddedController - Embedded Controller firmware for the Framework Laptop
picotool
fpp - Falcon Player
FrameworkHacksPkg
vesta - Indoor environment monitoring on a Raspberry Pi with HomeKit integration. I²C, SPI, UART, GPIO, MQTT. Node.js, Python (and MicroPython!), Arduino, C, C++.
ExpansionCards - Reference designs and documentation to create Expansion Cards for the Framework Laptop