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Some common pinouts [20] for 2.54 mm (0.100 in) pin headers are: ARM 2×10 pin (or sometimes the older 2×7), used by almost all ARM-based systems; MIPS EJTAG (2×7 pin) used for MIPS based systems; 2×5 pin Altera ByteBlaster-compatible JTAG extended by multiple vendors; 2×5 pin AVR extends Altera JTAG with SRST (and in some cases TRST and an ...
Blue Pill board has a STM32F103C8T6 microcontroller. [79] [80] [81] Unfortunately, most blue pill boards now contain a fake STM32 from China. [82] Black Pill board has a STM32F401CCU6 or STM32F411CEU6 microcontroller. [83] [84] [85] ST Nucleo-32 boards have Arduino Nano pin-compatible male pin headers too. [86] (see Nucleo section below)
The Crumbuino-Mega is a low-cost module comparable to the Arduino-Mega 2560 and can be used as Arduino-Mega 2560 in the Arduino-IDE. The Arduino bootloader is preloaded, hence the module is ready-to-use. The documentation shows the pin mapping of Arduino-naming to module pinout. Cuteduino: ATtiny85 Cytron Technologies: Cuteduino Features:
Floppy drive A/B twist pinout Wire Controller Drive A Drive B Description 1-9 1-9 1-9 1-9 No Change 10 10 16 10 Motor Enable Drive 0/1 11 11 15 11 Ground, No Change 12 12 14 12 Drive Select 0/1 13 13 13 13 Ground, No Change 14 14 12 14 Drive Select 0/1 15 15 11 15 Ground, No Change 16 16 10 16 Motor Enable Drive 0/1 17-34 17-34 17-34 17-34
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Normal density of DA, DB, DC, DD, and DE sized connectors. The D-subminiature or D-sub is a common type of electrical connector.They are named for their characteristic D-shaped metal shield.
The pin-out is optimized for ARM and low-power SoC interfaces and is distinguished from classical PC interfaces by its target-oriented focus on low-power and mobile applications. SMARC is based on the ultra-low power (ULP-COM) form factor which was introduced by the companies Kontron and Adlink in February 2012. [5]
The 13W3 connector became something of a pseudo-standard for high-end graphical workstations from the early 1990s to the early 2000s. [3]: 176 [4] [5]: 43 Among its primary users included Sun Microsystems, Silicon Graphics (SGI) and IBM (the latter for use with their RISC workstations), [3]: 176 [6]: 281, 305 as well as some displays from Apple, [7] NeXT and Intergraph.