Posted by: jajan547 on 2022-07-08 20:16:20I've had these .bin images for a while but no programmer for them. I figured I'd share them here. The EGRETs you see here are 341S0850, 341S0851, and 344S0100.
Posted by: joshc on 2022-07-08 20:18:11I think these have been floating around for a while (maybe), but the problem seems to be what to program them onto.
Posted by: jajan547 on 2022-07-08 20:20:10Yeah I think you'd need an old special programmer and chips or an adapter. I know these were around a while back but I haven't been able to find them on a search so just figured upload them here for safe keeping.
Posted by: trag on 2022-07-09 20:23:46Well my old Needham EMP-30 supports:
Posted by: Amiga of Rochester on 2022-07-24 17:30:05I believe the pin out is different sadly... would love a way to make replacement cuda egret chips
Posted by: jajan547 on 2022-07-24 18:01:40Maybe just make adapter boards
Posted by: techknight on 2022-08-23 13:26:58reverse engineer the original firmware to determine its functionality, recreate a new program in C and compile it to an AVR or PIC, using an adapter board. If you wanna get fancy, then ASM. haha.
Best case scenario.
Posted by: jajan547 on 2022-08-23 13:35:59I have this I just need a Windows 98 Laptop.
Posted by: olePigeon on 2022-09-06 09:58:02@jajan547 Wow. That looks like one ridiculously comprehensive programmer.
Posted by: jajan547 on 2022-09-06 10:02:11
@jajan547 Wow. That looks like one ridiculously comprehensive programmer.
Traded it with someone from Australia supposedly OzTechnics was a short lived company but somehow the software was preserved on the way back machine. Might I be able to use this to dissect the EGRET?
Posted by: jajan547 on 2022-09-11 15:59:13If anyone has a Windows 98 Laptop I'd be willing to ship this out for them to try and see if it can read an EGRET/CUDA, there's a ton of brand new adapter boards that came with it.