16x2 Cyrillic LCD available in USA?

On 13 May 2007 20:12:41 -0700, larwe <zwsdotcom@gmail.com> wrote:

On May 13, 11:03 pm, Roman <m...@dipmicro.com> wrote:

ÔĎ×ÁŇÉÝ is still a word in Russia? We (Czechs and Slovaks) ditched the

Word or not, in Google Groups it's unintelligible. I don't know what
you're seeing in my quote above, but I'm just seeing garbage hi-ASCII.
Then Google Groups is faulty, since the message contained the header

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=KOI8-R

so the text should be rendered correctly.

Paul
 
On 13 May 2007 11:25:49 -0700, larwe <zwsdotcom@gmail.com> wrote:

I'm looking for a small number (2-3) of standard 16x2 LCDs with a
Cyrillic character ROM and the standard 7-wire/11-wire Hitachi-style
interface. Backlighting is not important, and I can make do with
almost any size. Standard Roman LCDs don't have enough user-defined
character spaces for my needs.
Graphic displays with 122x32 pixels and SED1520 controller might be easier
to get, and interfacing should be similar.


Mit freundlichen Grüßen

Frank-Christian Krügel
 
On May 14, 3:47 am, larwe <zwsdot...@gmail.com> wrote:
Wow, I bet you can help if my next project requires a character LCD
with Klingon CGROM? ;)
How many units do you need? :)

The name was invented with some sense of humour way back,
then when things got serious it had already stuck. Not the worst
of names anyway, and by todays standards not whacky enough
to scare many people away, I guess.

Dimiter

On May 13, 3:51 pm, Didi <d...@tgi-sci.com> wrote:

Not located in the USA, but should be no problem to get.

Thanks for that one... I have found several similar vendors selling
such products, but as yet have not successfully made contact with any
of them.

Hmm. Suddenly, I wonder if Olimex might be able to help.

Dimiter Popoff Transgalactic Instruments

Wow, I bet you can help if my next project requires a character LCD
with Klingon CGROM? ;)
 
"larwe" <zwsdotcom@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1179084259.524674.312630@w5g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
On May 13, 3:12 pm, Vladimir Vassilevsky <antispam_bo...@hotmail.com
wrote:

Cyrillic character ROM and the standard 7-wire/11-wire
Hitachi-style

I had a suspicion that you are from sovok, but now it is more then a

"From" sovok?

I have no cultural affiliation with Mother Russia (the closest I get
is that I want to take a tour of Pripyat).
And I thought I was the only one! People always think I'm mad when I say
I want to go. I'm getting married next year which will take all my
vacation days so if I don't go this year then I'll have to wait a couple
of years.

There used to be an outstanding website (which sadly disappeared one
day) created by a young lady who lived near the area who would slip the
security a small 'donation' and they would let her ride her motorbike
around the exclusion zone which meant she could ride as fast as she
liked and there were no moving vehicles or creatures bigger than foxes
to crash into.

The site had a wonderfully glib tone and she bore no malice to the
authorities who, it could be fairly easily argued, did not handle the
crisis all that well. Very touching and she had some great pictures.
Shame to lose it - maybe it is hosted somewhere else now. <quick google>
A-ha!
http://www.kiddofspeed.com/chapter1.html Brilliant site.
 
On May 14, 6:14 am, "Tom Lucas"
is that I want to take a tour of Pripyat).

And I thought I was the only one! People always think I'm mad when I say
I want to go. I'm getting married next year which will take all my
If you don't go this year, you won't be able to see the sarcophagus at
CNPP; they are supposedly installing the "huge wheeled Quonset hut"
shield in 2008.

There used to be an outstanding website (which sadly disappeared one
day) created by a young lady who lived near the area who would slip the
security a small 'donation' and they would let her ride her motorbike
Yeah, I've read it, but other reports make it out to be a hoax;
<http://pripyat.com/en/publications/2005/06/06/180.html>

Actually Pripyat is probably the single place on this planet I'd most
like to live. The post-apocalyptic deserted city vibe very much
appeals to me. (And no, I'm not being tongue-in-cheek). I'd rather
live in space, or in a deep-sea habitat, but Pripyat is an excellent
third-best.
 
On May 14, 1:57 am, Paul Keinanen <keina...@sci.fi> wrote:

Then Google Groups is faulty, since the message contained the header
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=KOI8-R
Google Groups has bugs? Oh no! Say it ain't so!!
 
On May 14, 3:30 am, Frank-Christian Kruegel <dontmai...@news.invalid>
wrote:

Cyrillic character ROM and the standard 7-wire/11-wire Hitachi-style
interface. Backlighting is not important, and I can make do with
almost any size. Standard Roman LCDs don't have enough user-defined

Graphic displays with 122x32 pixels and SED1520 controller might be easier
to get, and interfacing should be similar.
On close inspection, this option turns out to be really nasty. Current
application uses 4-bit mode, and there are not 4 more spare I/Os for
an 8-bit bus.
 
"larwe" <zwsdotcom@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1179140760.423724.113680@l77g2000hsb.googlegroups.com...
On May 14, 6:14 am, "Tom Lucas"
is that I want to take a tour of Pripyat).

And I thought I was the only one! People always think I'm mad when I
say
I want to go. I'm getting married next year which will take all my

If you don't go this year, you won't be able to see the sarcophagus at
CNPP; they are supposedly installing the "huge wheeled Quonset hut"
shield in 2008.
Well, in that case I better get a move on. My buddy has just got a job
that pays better so maybe I can talk him into tagging along.

There used to be an outstanding website (which sadly disappeared one
day) created by a young lady who lived near the area who would slip
the
security a small 'donation' and they would let her ride her motorbike

Yeah, I've read it, but other reports make it out to be a hoax;
http://pripyat.com/en/publications/2005/06/06/180.html
The writing style and fascinating subject matter was what drew me in and
that still stands whether it was true or not. Shame that the article had
to become embroiled in controversy but that's the internet for you...

Actually Pripyat is probably the single place on this planet I'd most
like to live. The post-apocalyptic deserted city vibe very much
appeals to me. (And no, I'm not being tongue-in-cheek). I'd rather
live in space, or in a deep-sea habitat, but Pripyat is an excellent
third-best.
I like it more for being one of the few remaining snapshots of what the
USSR was really like because the post cold-war version seems to be all
Nike and Coke. Maybe I'm just ghoulish?
 
larwe wrote:


Actually Pripyat is probably the single place on this planet I'd most
like to live. The post-apocalyptic deserted city vibe very much
appeals to me.
What a naive idea. You will be fighting for the survival with pillagers,
illegal settlers and the other scum which is hanging around there.

(And no, I'm not being tongue-in-cheek). I'd rather
live in space, or in a deep-sea habitat, but Pripyat is an excellent
third-best.
If you *really* want to live in such place (about which I have some
doubts), you can choose a ghost town. There are many abandoned or half
abandoned places in KS, OK, AR.

VLV
 
On 14 May 2007 05:15:56 -0700, larwe <zwsdotcom@gmail.com> wrote:

On May 14, 3:30 am, Frank-Christian Kruegel <dontmai...@news.invalid
wrote:

Cyrillic character ROM and the standard 7-wire/11-wire Hitachi-style
interface. Backlighting is not important, and I can make do with
almost any size. Standard Roman LCDs don't have enough user-defined

Graphic displays with 122x32 pixels and SED1520 controller might be easier
to get, and interfacing should be similar.

On close inspection, this option turns out to be really nasty. Current
application uses 4-bit mode, and there are not 4 more spare I/Os for
an 8-bit bus.
Sh...

Ok, then try this one.
http://www.optrex.com/products/partdetail.asp?PartNumber=F-51852GNFJ-SLW-AEN

It has an SPI-like mode (CS, A0, SI, SCK), and it seems to be available.

Mit freundlichen Grüßen

Frank-Christian Krügel
 
larwe <zwsdotcom@gmail.com> wrote in news:1179103525.447943.235400
@y80g2000hsf.googlegroups.com:

On May 13, 7:54 pm, Gary Tait <classic...@yahoo.com> wrote:

I'm looking for a small number (2-3) of standard 16x2 LCDs with a
Cyrillic character ROM and the standard 7-wire/11-wire Hitachi-style

I have one I pulled from an old laser printer (NEC silent writer 800 or
something, I know it had a big board with a 68000 and a whole bunch of

Weird! How do you know it has Cyrillic CGROM? (Or, was that
information implicit in the ROM version?)
I have been using it in my microcontroller experiments. In figuring it out,
connected to my PC, I fount it is Cyrillic, and I know Cyrillic when I see
it (not that I am an expert in it).
 
In article <1179137551.59051.0@iris.uk.clara.net>, Tom Lucas
<news@REMOVE_tlcs_THIS_dot_TO_fsnet_REPLY_dot_co.uk> writes
"larwe" <zwsdotcom@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1179084259.524674.312630@w5g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
On May 13, 3:12 pm, Vladimir Vassilevsky <antispam_bo...@hotmail.com
wrote:

Cyrillic character ROM and the standard 7-wire/11-wire
Hitachi-style

I had a suspicion that you are from sovok, but now it is more then a

"From" sovok?

I have no cultural affiliation with Mother Russia (the closest I get
is that I want to take a tour of Pripyat).

And I thought I was the only one! People always think I'm mad when I say
I want to go. I'm getting married next year which will take all my
vacation days so if I don't go this year then I'll have to wait a couple
of years.

There used to be an outstanding website (which sadly disappeared one
day) created by a young lady who lived near the area who would slip the
security a small 'donation' and they would let her ride her motorbike
around the exclusion zone which meant she could ride as fast as she
liked and there were no moving vehicles or creatures bigger than foxes
to crash into.

The site had a wonderfully glib tone and she bore no malice to the
authorities who, it could be fairly easily argued, did not handle the
crisis all that well. Very touching and she had some great pictures.
Shame to lose it - maybe it is hosted somewhere else now. <quick google
A-ha!
http://www.kiddofspeed.com/chapter1.html Brilliant site.
That site is amazing. Well worth looking at.

--
\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\
\/\/\/\/\ Chris Hills Staffs England /\/\/\/\/
/\/\/ chris@phaedsys.org www.phaedsys.org \/\/\
\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/
 
Chris Hills <chris@phaedsys.org> wrote in
news:2vtn3iEmuJSGFAXZ@phaedsys.demon.co.uk:

There used to be an outstanding website (which sadly disappeared one
day) created by a young lady who lived near the area who would slip the
security a small 'donation' and they would let her ride her motorbike
around the exclusion zone which meant she could ride as fast as she
liked and there were no moving vehicles or creatures bigger than foxes
to crash into.

The site had a wonderfully glib tone and she bore no malice to the
authorities who, it could be fairly easily argued, did not handle the
crisis all that well. Very touching and she had some great pictures.
Shame to lose it - maybe it is hosted somewhere else now. <quick google
A-ha!
http://www.kiddofspeed.com/chapter1.html Brilliant site.



That site is amazing. Well worth looking at.
I sent Elena Filatova a donation a couple of years ago, I was that
impressed with this. There's a lot of really good info and images there
that no base hoax could accumulate. I think the controversy doesn't suggest
she never went to get her own images though, but that there might have been
several people finding ways in for various reasons, many before she went
in, and at least one extra person with her to take pictures, though why the
person who claimed that seems not to have heard of tripods and timers in
cameras is anybody's guess. I guess some people just needed this to be a
hoax, as some seem to need the moon landings to be a hoax.
 
"Frank-Christian Kruegel" <dontmailme@news.invalid> wrote in message
news:9ttg439p6n3p0bgkc74os1a4qau0r1858n@4ax.com...
On 14 May 2007 05:15:56 -0700, larwe <zwsdotcom@gmail.com> wrote:

On May 14, 3:30 am, Frank-Christian Kruegel <dontmai...@news.invalid
wrote:

Cyrillic character ROM and the standard 7-wire/11-wire Hitachi-style
interface. Backlighting is not important, and I can make do with
almost any size. Standard Roman LCDs don't have enough user-defined

Graphic displays with 122x32 pixels and SED1520 controller might be
easier
to get, and interfacing should be similar.

On close inspection, this option turns out to be really nasty. Current
application uses 4-bit mode, and there are not 4 more spare I/Os for
an 8-bit bus.

Sh...

Ok, then try this one.
http://www.optrex.com/products/partdetail.asp?PartNumber=F-51852GNFJ-SLW-AEN

It has an SPI-like mode (CS, A0, SI, SCK), and it seems to be available.

Mit freundlichen Grüßen

Frank-Christian Krügel
While working in the Ukraine we used Bolymin LCDs, which had cyrillic
coding. If the company still exists(www.bolymin.com.tw) they might sell one
or send a sample.
Alex
 
"Alexander Baranov" <baranov@verizon.net> wrote in message
news:hcE2i.15345$rT6.8782@trndny08...
While working in the Ukraine we used Bolymin LCDs, which had cyrillic
coding. If the company still exists(www.bolymin.com.tw) they might sell
one or send a sample.
Doncha just love translated chinese? From their "about us" page:

LCD Module Manufacturer People Oriented, sincere human interface Service
Oriented, proficiency and reliability Innovation Oriented, various
available technologies Custom-design Oriented, semi- and fully-design
Quality oriented, delicate steps follow-up.
I particularly like companies with a delicate steps follow-up.

;)

Steve
http://www.fivetrees.com
 
larwe wrote:
.... snip ...

Actually Pripyat is probably the single place on this planet I'd
most like to live. The post-apocalyptic deserted city vibe very
much appeals to me. (And no, I'm not being tongue-in-cheek). I'd
rather live in space, or in a deep-sea habitat, but Pripyat is
an excellent third-best.
And yet you live in greater NYC :) Try Maine.

--
<http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/vista_cost.txt>
<http://www.securityfocus.com/columnists/423>
<http://www.aaxnet.com/editor/edit043.html>
<http://kadaitcha.cx/vista/dogsbreakfast/index.html>
cbfalconer at maineline dot net


--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
 
CBFalconer <cbfalconer@yahoo.com> wrote in
news:4648D7CB.7A50568D@yahoo.com:

And yet you live in greater NYC :) Try Maine.
You don't think NYC is post apocalyptic? >:)
 
On May 16, 1:17 pm, Lostgallifreyan <no-...@nowhere.net> wrote:

And yet you live in greater NYC :) Try Maine.

You don't think NYC is post apocalyptic? >:)
The apocalypse is still in progress in NYC.

And, for the record, I loathe every stone of the place and can't wait
to leave.
 
"Vladimir Vassilevsky" <antispam_bogus@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:Dx_1i.2982$LR5.435@newssvr17.news.prodigy.net...
larwe wrote:


Actually Pripyat is probably the single place on this planet I'd most
like to live. The post-apocalyptic deserted city vibe very much
appeals to me.

What a naive idea. You will be fighting for the survival with pillagers,
illegal settlers and the other scum which is hanging around there.

(And no, I'm not being tongue-in-cheek). I'd rather
live in space, or in a deep-sea habitat, but Pripyat is an excellent
third-best.

If you *really* want to live in such place (about which I have some
doubts), you can choose a ghost town. There are many abandoned or half
abandoned places in KS, OK, AR.

VLV
Posting from rural Kansas. I can supply a very long list of very small
villages in Kansas. Some still have houses which can be fixed.

--

Geo. Michael Henry
"Coyote is always waiting and he is always hungry."
 

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