The PICkit2 programmer was released back in 2005, and allowed the user to program and debug most of the 8 and 16 bit PIC microcontrollers and dsPIC controllers as well. Its successor, the PICkit3 programmer, was released some years later.

The PICkitPlus command line application supports both the PICkit2 and PICkit3 programmers and even potentially clones as well. It can run alone, but is mainly intended for use with Integrated Development Environments such as Great Cow BASIC. The PICkitPlus command line software does not support EEPROM chips; although the PICkitPlus GUI software does.


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More information about the features of the PICkitPlus is available www.pickitplus.co.uk, and the PICkitPlus software is also available for purchase from Piccircuit for $12 or direct from www.pickitplus.co.uk for the complete package.

The package (product no. PG164120) contains the programmer itself, two CDs, and a USB cable. The programmer looks very compact. It has a USB port (as well as a key ring) on the top, a red button and three LEDs (power, target, and busy) on the front, and the 6-pin ICSP (In-Circuit Serial Programming) port on the bottom.

Yes. The PIC32 processors used on the ChipKit boards can be programmed with a clocked serial protocol somewhat similar to the "ISP Programming" used to program standalone AVR chips. All you need is a compatible device programmer, like the Microchip PICKit-3 I don't know if there are any very low cost programmers like there are for AVR; there were some "PICKit-2" clones that were a bit cheaper than the real microchip product, but I'm not sure whether pickit-2 can program the pic32 chips. (PICKit-3 is "only" about $50.)

I started using the UNO32 as I am much more familiar with PIC hardware then Atmel. Used to do assembler on 8-bit PIC's. I also have a variety of programmers for PIC, whereas I had nothing "modern" for Atmel. Having lots of parts laying around I did eventually buy a couple bare PCB for Duemilanove. To get the boot loader into the chip I picket up an AVR ISP MKII. I guess my thinking is that with the Arduino IDE in particular, and programing in C on AVR or PIC32 the differences between these platforms are no longer all that significant.

PICkit is a powerful programmer application with scripting support. The program includes comes with a logic analyzer, logic output and auto detection of devices. It enables in-circuit debugging on most PIC microcontrollers. It runs, halts and single steps the program while the PIC microcontroller is embedded in the application.

Right, then we have to get the terminology right. Will these barebones boards have a bootloader on them? If not, the FTDI interface won't put it there. You need an ICSP programmer (one that uses the SPI interface) and I strongly doubt that the Pic Kit will do that. Its interface will be for PIC chips.

To save costs, if you have at least one Arduino already you can use that as an ICSP programmer. Search for "Arduino as ISP". I wrote a sketch that lets you put code onto SD cards and program bare baords, as described here:

This device is a programmer for AVR-based controllers, such as our Orangutan robot controllers and the 3pi robot. The programmer emulates an STK500 on a virtual serial port, making it compatible with standard AVR programming software. Two...

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