If you can’t stand the thought of using an application in your browser, you might as well jump ahead to the comments and start flaming. Still with us? Imagine this scenario. You are at the office, at ...
Hex Fiend is a robust and efficient binary file editor professional, crafted for macOS. It stands out for its ability to work with extremely large files instantly, a feat achieved by its optimized ...
DO NOT INSERT DEVICE YET! To use this page you must first create a file suitable for burning into your chip. For most chips we will create a *.hex file from running an *.asm file through the XASM ...
Last time I talked about how to use AWK (or, more probably the GNU AWK known as GAWK) to process text files. You might be thinking: why did I care? Hardware hackers don’t need text files, right? Maybe ...
A small, dependency-free Python script to parse and display Intel HEX files with readable information. Useful when working with AVR toolchains or inspecting embedded firmware images. Files ...
Linux systems support a number of file editors – like vi, vim, neovim, ne, GNU Emacs etc. But you can also install an editor that allows you to view the contents of and make changes to binary ...
I want to be able to view the records in a file created by a proprietary application for the Mac. Nothing even remotely nefarious; I'm just involved in a technical argument over the feasibility of an ...