kopia lustrzana https://github.com/raspberrypi/pico-playground
README.md: remove nearly duplicate paragraph
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@ -4,12 +4,6 @@ from [pico-extras](https://github.com/raspberrypi/pico-extras)
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Note that most of these examples are neither fleshed out nor well documented. They mostly serve
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Note that most of these examples are neither fleshed out nor well documented. They mostly serve
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the purpose of playing with/testing particular areas of functionality (mostly audio/video related)
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the purpose of playing with/testing particular areas of functionality (mostly audio/video related)
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Finally, you may wonder why many of these demos set the system clock to 48Mhz. The reason is that until we had physical
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chips, we were running at a fixed 48Mhz system clock on FPGA. Most of these examples were written before the
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RP2040 design was final and as such were all run against FPGA. As a result some of the examples do things in a way
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that you wouldn't necessarily need to if you had more clock speed available (which you do), but on the plus side,
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you have that much more time to do even more things!
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Finally, you may wonder why many of these demos set the system clock to 48Mhz. The reason is that until we had physical
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Finally, you may wonder why many of these demos set the system clock to 48Mhz. The reason is that until we had physical
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chips, we were running at a fixed 48Mhz system clock using an FPGA. Most of these examples were written before the
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chips, we were running at a fixed 48Mhz system clock using an FPGA. Most of these examples were written before the
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RP2040 design was final, so were all developed with that fixed 48MHz system clock. As a result some of the examples do things in a way
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RP2040 design was final, so were all developed with that fixed 48MHz system clock. As a result some of the examples do things in a way
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