Neoprogrammer V2.2.0.10 Verified Access

Neoprogrammer V2.2.0.10 Verified Access

NeoProgrammer V2.2.0.10 is a lightweight, highly versatile Windows application designed for programming, reading, and writing to various non-volatile memory chips. Developed as a community-driven alternative to rigid proprietary software, it is widely utilized by electronics hobbyists, repair technicians, and firmware engineers. It provides an efficient interface for reviving bricked hardware, flashing BIOS chips, and modifying EEPROMs.

This public link is valid for 7 days and shares a thread, including any personal information you added. This link or copies made by others cannot be deleted. If you share with third parties, their policies apply. Can’t copy the link right now. Try again later. Neoprogrammer V2.2.0.10

Under the Tools menu, you can calculate CRC32, MD5, and SHA-1 of the current buffer. This is essential when comparing two BIOS dumps to confirm corruption. NeoProgrammer V2

It features native logic handling that makes working with low-voltage (1.8V) chips (common in modern laptops) highly reliable when paired with a 1.8V adapter. This public link is valid for 7 days

If you work with electronics repair, BIOS modding, automotive tuning, or router unbricking, you know that having a reliable hardware programmer is only half the battle. The other half is the software. is widely considered the best alternative software for the ubiquitous CH341A programmer and various other hardware flashing tools.

resource db : Postgres plan: "small", region: "us-east-1"

| Category | Examples | | :--- | :--- | | | Winbond (W25Q series), Macronix (MX25 series), GigaDevice (GD25 series), XMC (XM25 series) | | SPI NAND Flash | Winbond (W25N series), GigaDevice (GD5F series), DOSILICON (DS35M series), FORESEE (F35S series) | | SPI EEPROM | 25xxx, 95xxx, 45xxx | | I2C EEPROM | 24Cxx, AT24RF08, PCF8582C | | MicroWire EEPROM | 93Cxx, 93LCxx, 93AAxx (8/16-bit) | | Microcontrollers | AVR (ATmega, ATtiny), NUVOTON (N76E003), ENE KB90xx |

© 2026 YENA Engineering | Blog

Log in with your credentials

Forgot your details?