News
October 24, 2011 FTDI releases C232HD USB to UART Cables October 24, 2011 - Future Technology Devices International (FTDI) releases C232HD USB Hi-Speed to Digital Level UART Cables. The cables ...
In this case a USB-TTL adapter based around the FTDI FT232R IC: the TTL-232R-3V3-AJ adapter with 12 Mbps USB on one end, and a 3 Mbps UART on the other end.
Future Technology Devices International Ltd. (FTDI Chip) will show off two USB 2.0 mini-modules at the Nuremberg Embedded World show in early March.
Nowadays USB port is used widely for data transactions between electronic devices and computers. In many scenarios, there is no need to communicate with the USB port directly, therefore electronic ...
This stemmed from a review of a friend’s circuit design that used the UART in the project, but also called for an FTDI chip in order to reprogram via USB and a bootloader.
This product is USB to 4 RS-485 conversion module. The FTDI FT4232H is used for USB to quad UART conversion, and the Analog Devices ADM3078E is used for UART to RS-485 conversion.
The USB solutions specialist Future Technology Devices International Limited (FTDI) has expanded its X-Chip series of feature-rich USB-to-serial interface chips by introducing an ultra-compact FT234XD ...
Future Technology Devices International (FTDI) has added two more cables to its USB to digital level serial interface product range. The devices which interface USB 2.0 with digital level UART cables ...
Pure Python driver for using and reconfiguring the CY7C652xx family of USB to SPI/I2C/UART bridge ICs. - mbed-ce/cy_serial_bridge ...
Mouser now stocks the FT4232HA high-speed USB-to-UART/MPSSE IC from FTDI Chip. The device is an automotive-qualified USB 2.0-to-UART converter that seamlessly supplies high-speed USB support to target ...
As the IoT grows rapidly, efficient and stable communication between devices has become necessary for intelligent applications. FTDI's FT232RQ-REEL, available from WIN SOURCE, is a USB-to-UART ...
FTDI Chip’s latest series of multi-channel USB interface ICs have the capacity to deal with next generation power requirements, as larger items of hardware start to make use of the protocol.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results