File · /index.htm REV 2026.04 · Status Live

A slow journal of embedded systems, hardware, and low-level craft.

Long-form writing about microcontrollers, assembly language, driver development, and the strange specific corners of hardware that most publications no longer cover.

logix4u.net Est. 2003 · Restored 2026
Editor’s Desk
Vol. 01
Issue 01 · April 2026

Welcome back. We are restarting a quiet publication that used to live at this address, and we think you will find the new work familiar in spirit.

The site you are reading was, for most of two decades, the home of a small and widely used piece of Windows software. The software is gone. The URL stays. We think there is still an audience for the kind of careful technical writing the old site tried to produce, and we think that audience has been badly served by the last few years of hardware publishing.

We are going to publish slowly. We are going to publish long. We are going to publish when it is finished. If that sounds like what you were hoping existed, pour some coffee. There is a primer below.

— The Editor Apr 2026
The Primer

Three places to start reading.

If you are new to the journal, these three pieces give you the shape of the thing.

Hardware and protocols covered 26 entries · growing

8051·Z80·68HC11·PIC16F84·AVR ATmega·STM32F4·RP2040·ESP32·MSP430·Parallax Propeller·Raspberry Pi·Arduino Due·BeagleBone·MAX7219·MCP23017·DS1307·Parallel Port·USB-to-Serial·JTAG·SWD·I²C·SPI·CAN·UART·RS-232·RS-485

Field Notes · Recent

From the workbench, in passing.

12 Apr 2026

On noise, and the difficulty of finding where it is actually coming from.

A one-afternoon investigation that turned into a two-week chase through the analog front end of a temperature logger. Notes before the formal writeup lands.

04 Apr 2026

The PIC programmer that keeps refusing to die, and what that actually means.

A decade-old programmer, still in daily use, still reliable. The lesson is not nostalgia. The lesson is what made the thing well-engineered in the first place.

28 Mar 2026

What we actually mean when we say “production firmware.”

A short terminology note. The difference between firmware that works and firmware that ships matters more than most engineers quietly acknowledge.

Dispatches

From the journal.

Recent writing. Unscheduled. Arrives when it is finished.

Subject Index

The catalog.

Four subjects. Every piece on the site lives under one of them.

§ 01

Hardware Interfacing

Parallel · serial · USB · direct I/O · device drivers

Open
§ 02

Embedded Systems

Microcontrollers · dev boards · firmware · real-time

Open
§ 03

Assembly & Low-Level

x86 · ARM · retro architectures · toolchains · linking

Open
§ 04

Digital Signal Processing

FIR · IIR · FFT · real-time DSP · audio · filtering

Open

This domain was first registered in January 2003 as the home of inpout32.dll, a Windows DLL and kernel-mode driver that gave user-level programs direct access to hardware ports on the NT line of Windows. It was written at the moment Microsoft started locking down ring-zero access, and hobbyists still needed a way to talk to the parallel port.

The software was hosted here for the better part of two decades. It was forked many times, academic papers cited it, university coursework linked to it, and every hobbyist project that needed to toggle a pin from user space eventually found its way to the original download page. It quietly became the de facto standard for hardware port access on Windows in an era that no longer exists.

The original site eventually lapsed. The domain became available.

We took the name because the work that happened here mattered, and because the URL had been pointing at a particular kind of technical writing for more than twenty years. Plain, accurate, and useful to the person on the other end of the screen. We intend to keep it pointing in the same direction.

About this journal

Written by a small group who read datasheets for fun and think the best technical writing has been getting rarer, not better. New dispatches arrive when they are finished. The archive grows as it grows.