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<DC-IRC>
<terrorpup> Question, has all the bullseye version been removed from the site? I need a version of bullseye for the Banana-Pi R2 Pro so that I can setup OMV, it doesn't work with bookworm
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<DC-IRC>
<igorpec> r2 pro ... did you check archive.armbian.com ?
<DC-IRC>
<terrorpup> no, I will now. I will book mark it, thanks @igorpec
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> @jspiros: I have these for that purpose: https://www.adafruit.com/product/954 and a usb-a to to usb-c adapter to switch the connector (can't find the link atm)...
<jspiros>
tenkawa42: these are just usb-c connectors connecting to orange pi zero 3 pins for 5v and usb2, for connecting usb-c audio dac, my project is a speaker mod
<jspiros>
I needed to crimp my own usb-c adapters so I could make them very short to fit in a compact space inside speakers
<jspiros>
and crimping is fun :)
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> crimping is not fun with one hand
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> (I can't use my left hand for anything with precision dexterity)
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<jspiros>
aw :(
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> I think it would actually still work using that cable if I wanted to do the same thing... the audio signals don't care about digital/computer
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> So it should bypass in theory the ttl uart
<jspiros>
though these ratcheting crimpers do make the final crimp a one handed affair, the setup would be difficult with only one
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> but there would be a fair amount of excess cable
<jspiros>
tenkawa42: I don't understand what you mean
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> my cabling suggestion if I wanted to use it does the exact same thing as yours
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> it connects a gpio to a usb c
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> it just has more pieces in betwee
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> between
<jspiros>
no
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> actually yes
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> your last piece coming off the board is a gpio to usb-c
<jspiros>
the cables I crimped are simple straight-through usb-c port (only serving usb 2.0 pins) to native usb and 5v and ground pins
<jspiros>
there's no gpio
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> yes
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> the "board" is gpio
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> those pins are gpio
<jspiros>
and the board is speaking native USB straight to DAC which is an off-the-shelf USB-C device
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> that is what those pins are called on the sbc btw
<jspiros>
i.e., the port is a host port, implemented natively on the allwinner soc
<DC-IRC>
<tenkawa42> gpio is a generic term in the sbc world
<jspiros>
tenkawa42, I think you're the one that's confused here, gpios are a specific thing, some pins on sbcs are gpios
<jspiros>
but not all of them are
<jspiros>
a 5v supply pin, for example, is not a gpio
<jspiros>
this board does have gpio pins, but I'm not using those for this, I'm using pins that connect to a USB host controller
<jspiros>
the pins named like "PC9" or "PH6" are GPIOs, some with alternate modes supported
<jspiros>
but voltage supply pins, ground pins, and most of that extra 13-pin header (which is the one I'm using) are not GPIOs
<jspiros>
that 13 pin extra header has USB host pins for two more USB ports, analog audio out pins, a composite video output pin, and an IR receiver pin
<jspiros>
as well as, yeah, three GPIOs, a 5v supply, and a ground pin
<jspiros>
those pin things are called pin headers, or just headers
<jspiros>
a novice might consider them to be one-and-the-same as the GPIOs they often expose on SBCs, but they're not actually GPIOs, that's an actual thing implemented by microcontrollers/SOCs
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