I m pretty sure it's not related to the hardware, as it works perfectly fine in windows. I believe it has to do with the firmware.
2011/7/9 Martin Peach <[email protected]> > If you are plugging and unplugging the arduino it's possible the OS doesn't > detect it properly. I know there were issues with the FTDI driver not > reporting when the device had been removed, that caused Pd to hang. > As long as your resistors are more than about 1 kOhm it should be OK. > If you write ones to the input pins they will have internal pullup > resistors enabled, so a switch that connects the pin to ground when it's on > will work. > And the pots should be wired like this: > > 5V > \ > / > \<----Pin > / > \ > GND > > Anyway you say it works once it connects, so it's probably not the > hardware, except possibly the cable/connectors. > > Martin > > > On 2011-07-09 12:00, Pierre Massat wrote: > >> It's a laptop. >> I don't get random dropouts once it's connected (I used it for 2 ours in >> Pd and it worked fine all the time), but it just doesn't appear (either >> in the Serial port menu of the IDE, or in the device list that comport >> outputs) randomly. Do you think that this could still be caused by >> something sucking up too much current? There's nothing special connected >> to the board : 2 pots, and 8 buttons (wired so that their rest position >> is High). >> >> Pierre >> >> >
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