![]() ![]() ![]() Not practical at this stage of development! On most modern Arduino variants, it means reflashing the Arduino’s bootloader chip, but then you have to reflash it back to the original every time you want to update your software. There is a more complex solution to this problem. There are specific classes of USB device, and the Arduino doesn’t look like a MIDI device to the PC, it looks like a serial port. The problem is, if applications on your PC are going to recognise your Arduino as a MIDI device, it needs to look like one. Because I already need a USB connection to the Arduino to upload software updates, I wondered if I could use this to transfer MIDI data as well. ![]() While I have a plan to improve on this later, I wanted to have a more robust connection during development. If you’ve been following my MIDI keyboard series, in part 4 you’ll have seen my dangerous looking MIDI connection. ![]()
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