Seems like a typo when covering inversion. They claim parity(0) = 0 but still use the equation with != from before.
It's nice to see that they, like me, subscribe to "an hour of experimenting can save 5 minutes of reading the documentation." Of course what people often fail to realize is that until you've found the answer, you often don't realize what the documentation was saying, such as the 16-bit thing. Management may ask "was that not in the manual?" But it's more nebulous than that.
Another great to look at it is possibly as a TDD approach vs analyzing the problem at a deeper level.
Very cool writeup, thanks for digging into all those data sheets and sharing it with us! I feel like the hands-on electronics stuff has always been a little bit inaccessible to me, but posts like these always make me a little more excited to start doing little projects myself. So thanks for posting.
Here is to hoping someone will do something similar for DRM'ed BOSCH ebike motors.
Please not. Bike thieves are already annoying as they are (a ring in the rural city I live in managed to steal over 400 k€ worth of bikes in a matter of months, in my case they only stole the control unit), and so are people modding their bikes to run (way) faster than the legal limit, leading to more and more calls for them being banned off of normal bike tracks.
[1] https://www.idowa.de/regionen/landshut/landkreis-landshut/se...
As for thieves, they apparently have ways of bypassing bosch drm via hardware - bosch bikes get stolen all the time. As for speed unlocks, they are trivially possible with hardware bypasses. I doubt open source firmware would do harm.
Naturally, this is why we should add GPS and a network connection to every device in existence. /s
Couple of big problems with this thought:
* You have to know you can't fence it. Do you think bike thieves are following exactly which e-bike models have DRM, whether it has been broken etc? I doubt it.
* It assumes that the DRM is so amazing that nobody figures out how to defeat it.
So it might be true, but it also might not.
We desperately need some large ass legal fund that takes the GPL violators to court.
The GPL also does not state that the source code should be easy to find. In the early days, one had to write a letter, send it by mail, in hopes of getting a tape or CD-ROM with the source code. For which you then had to pay as well.
Multi-frequency communication, a lot of retranslators making you to be able to fly inside of caves, refusing to use Starlink in the areas having a bleeding-edge anti-starlink antennas deployed. Or just receiving Netflix-grade picture from the optical cable while reducing to zero anything emitting radio-signals.