: It supports standard and custom baud rates, provided your hardware can handle them (often >115200bps). Real-time Monitoring
| Problem | Likely Fix | |---------|-------------| | No response on COM | Check wiring, correct COM port, close other serial tools | | Garbage characters | Wrong baud rate or parity | | Device not entering boot mode | Check boot pin sequence (hold during reset) | | Transfer stops early | Reduce baud rate (e.g., 115200) |
The confirmation prompt when switching to HEX display mode now only appears when timestamped data is actively being displayed, avoiding unnecessary interruptions.
Because SSCOM is a portable tool, the "installation" is simply a matter of downloading and running it. However, you must ensure you get it from a reliable source to avoid malware.
Please share a bit more: do you want a class announcement, discussion post, assignment prompt, or summary? If you’d like, I’ll assume you want a brief class announcement and write that now.
It would listen. It would remember. For another thirty years, at least.
: Developers can configure standard COM parameters instantly, including non-standard baud rates, data bits (5 to 8), stop bits, parity checks, and hardware/software flow control.
: Improved stability for high-speed transfers (up to 921600 bps or higher depending on hardware).
Please let me know if you'd like me to make any changes.
: View data in both ASCII and Hexadecimal formats.
In the left panel:
Set the , Data Bits , Stop Bits , and Parity to match your hardware device.
: Configuring LoRaWAN modules or cellular routers via AT commands.
For issues or rollback assistance, contact: [support email/portal]