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Board based on a PIC microcontroller, with native USB support and compatibility with the Arduino programming language plus an IDE built with Python and sdcc as compiler. Unduino [270] PIC: A board based on the dsPIC33FJ128MC202 microcontroller, with integrated motor control peripherals. Netduino [271] Cortex-M4 (STM32F4) Wilderness Labs
A 72 MHz 32-bit ARM Cortex-M3-based microcontroller (ST Microelectronics] STM32F103 [222]) with USB support, compatibility with Arduino shields, and 39 GP I/O pins. Programmable with the Open Source Maple IDE, [ 223 ] which is a branch of the Arduino IDE.
The following boards have Arduino Nano pin-compatible male pin headers with 0.6-inch row-to-row DIP-30 footprint, but these boards have 3.3 volt logic I/O, instead of 5 volt logic I/O for an Arduino Nano. Blue Pill board has a STM32F103C8T6 microcontroller. [79] [80] [81] Unfortunately, most blue pill boards now contain a fake STM32 from China ...
IDE, compiler, linker, debugger, flashing (in alphabetical order): Ac6 System Workbench for STM32 [note 1] [1] [2] (based on Eclipse and the GNU GCC toolchain with direct support for all ST-provided evaluation boards, Eval, Discovery and Nucleo, debug with ST-LINK) ARM Development Studio 5 by ARM Ltd. [3]
Since the original Espruino board, there have been a number of new official development boards including the small USB thumb-drive-sized Espruino Pico, [8] the Wifi-equipped Espruino WiFi, the Puck.js with built-in Bluetooth and the Pixl.js [9] with a built-in LC display and Arduino shield compatibility. Espruino is the operating system used on ...
Netduino – microcontroller board, .NET Micro Framework based; NodeMCU – Wi-Fi microcontroller board; Novena – an ARM based computer built by Andrew Huang and associates; OpenPOWER – Power ISA, an open-source hardware instruction set architecture initiated by IBM; OpenSPARC – Sun's, later Oracle's high-performance processor; Parallax ...
A free IDE is available that supports the USB-connected ToolStick line of modular prototyping boards. These microcontrollers were originally developed by Cygnal. In 2012, the company introduced ARM-based mixed-signal MCUs with very low power and USB options, supported by free Eclipse-based tools.
debugWIRE is supported by all modern hardware debuggers from Microchip.This includes Atmel-ICE, [3] JTAGICE3, AVR Dragon, JTAGICE mkII, and SNAP. [4] It is also possible to build a cheap debugWIRE hardware debugger [5] based on an open-source Arduino sketch, [6] using a general USB-Serial adaptor or ATtiny85 board, [7] or a CH552 microcontroller.