Lifetime Support
Posted: 11 Nov 2011 11:42
I bought a Dataman 48LV for USD 1295 on 2001.
When i bought it, there were other programmers for around USD 300 that offered almost the same features as Dataman.
What motivated me to buy the Dataman programmer, was an article that appeared at Circuit Cellar magazine, that said Dataman had Lifetime Support.
At this time i want to program a PIC16F628A and i can't.
The only way is upgrading to 48XP but this implicates spending USD 395.
I think this is not "Lifetime Support". For you it would mean a minimum effort to support an "A" suffix for PICs on my current hardware.
I always told my colleagues that the best programmer that they could buy was Dataman 48, but i no longer feel comfortable recommending this product because of your "forced upgrade" policies.
Pedro A. Morinico
When i bought it, there were other programmers for around USD 300 that offered almost the same features as Dataman.
What motivated me to buy the Dataman programmer, was an article that appeared at Circuit Cellar magazine, that said Dataman had Lifetime Support.
At this time i want to program a PIC16F628A and i can't.
The only way is upgrading to 48XP but this implicates spending USD 395.
I think this is not "Lifetime Support". For you it would mean a minimum effort to support an "A" suffix for PICs on my current hardware.
I always told my colleagues that the best programmer that they could buy was Dataman 48, but i no longer feel comfortable recommending this product because of your "forced upgrade" policies.
Pedro A. Morinico