had an ST7735S-based display, I resoldered the LCD onto a TSSOP-to-DIP breakout board (which was annoying, as the pin pitch was slightly different and alignment needed much precision), and used the Adafruit Graphics Library and ST7735S driver on a Teensy 3.0 microcontroller, and it ...
To further confirm that I had an ST7735S-based display, I resoldered the LCD onto a TSSOP-to-DIP breakout board (which was annoying, as the pin pitch was slightly different and alignment needed much precision), and used the Adafruit Graphics Library and ST7735S driver on a Teensy 3.0 ...
To further confirm that I had an ST7735S-based display, I resoldered the LCD onto a TSSOP-to-DIP breakout board (which was annoying, as the pin pitch was slightly different and alignment needed much precision), and used the Adafruit Graphics Library and ST7735S driver on a Teensy 3.0 ...
To further confirm that I had an ST7735S-based display, I resoldered the LCD onto a TSSOP-to-DIP breakout board (which was annoying, as the pin pitch was slightly different and alignment needed much precision), and used the Adafruit Graphics Library and ST7735S driver on a Teensy 3.0 ...
and how it displays images. The first step was to look into the memory contents of the 1MB SPI Flash, as that is a pretty large amount of memory for such a simple device. I desoldered the chip and mounted it on a SSOP-to-DIP adapter, and dumped its contents to a file using my ...
had an ST7735S-based display, I resoldered the LCD onto a TSSOP-to-DIP breakout board (which was annoying, as the pin pitch was slightly different and alignment needed much precision), and used the Adafruit Graphics Library and ST7735S driver on a Teensy 3.0 microcontroller, and it ...