![]() See: Īlso there's my old favorite the Spin FV-1, but if you're set on C/C++ then forget about that. I got a BlackFin Demo/Eval board for just $75 but haven't started doing anything with that either. I got one and have played around with it a bit. It does have a built in IDE for writing C/C++ code as well as support for Pure Data. I don't currently know what the limitations are. I realize I can't likely have it all, but I really don't even know what's out there to even start the conversation.Ĭheck out - for a little over $100. The chip has to at least send me in that direction. My goal is to someday do Strymon type stuff on a hobbyist level. I'm mostly interested in doing delays and reverbs. They definitely sound good, but a development board is over $500, which is too much for me until I know if this is something I really want to get into.Ī chip with a reasonably priced Dev Board.ĭecent C/C++ support with free/inexpensive toolchain.ĭoesn't have to be insanely powerful, but at least usefully capable. The only one I know specifically of I'd AD's SHARC chips. What I'm looking for is a good chip family to use. I would like to dip my feet into DSP for guitar. In a past life I was fairly decent with C/C++ coding. I am pretty experienced in the analog electronics area, and have also been dabbling with digital stuff (arduino and AVR stuff) as of late. I would like to venture into real-time dsp as a hobbyist. ![]()
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