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  2. EEPROM - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EEPROM

    Many past microcontrollers included both (flash memory for the firmware and a small EEPROM for parameters), though the trend with modern microcontrollers is to emulate EEPROM using flash. As of 2020, flash memory costs much less than byte-programmable EEPROM and is the dominant memory type wherever a system requires a significant amount of non ...

  3. ATmega328 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ATmega328

    The Atmel 8-bit AVR RISC-based microcontroller combines 32 KB ISP flash memory with read-while-write capabilities, 1 KB EEPROM, 2 KB SRAM, 23 general-purpose I/O lines, 32 general-purpose working registers, 3 flexible timer/counters with compare modes, internal and external interrupts, serial programmable USART, a byte-oriented 2-wire serial ...

  4. DataFlash - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DataFlash

    Both DataFlash and EEPROM chips can be accessed from a microcontroller, using a 4-wire Serial Peripheral Interface Bus (SPI bus). Both are available in small 8 pin packages. The protocol interfaces are very similar; in both cases, bytes are written or read, via SPI, one or more bytes at a time.

  5. Comparison of single-board microcontrollers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_single-board...

    A board based on the dsPIC33FJ128MC202 microcontroller, with integrated motor control peripherals. Netduino N2 [251] Wilderness Labs [251] Yes Cortex M3 (ARMv7-M) 120 MHz Arduino 69mm x 53mm USB 5V - 9V DC 192 Kb 60 Kb 16 6 6 1/15/2013 120 MHz 32-bit ARM7 microcontroller board with support for the .NET Micro Framework. Pin compatible with ...

  6. Microcontroller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microcontroller

    In 2012, following a global crisis—a worst ever annual sales decline and recovery and average sales price year-over-year plunging 17%—the biggest reduction since the 1980s—the average price for a microcontroller was US$0.88 (US$0.69 for 4-/8-bit, US$0.59 for 16-bit, US$1.76 for 32-bit). [15]

  7. List of Arduino boards and compatible systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Arduino_boards_and...

    The Teensy 4.0 has an NXP i.MXRT1062 ARM Cortex-M7 at 600 MHz with 1024 KB RAM (512 KB is tightly coupled), 2048 KB flash (64K reserved for recovery & EEPROM emulation), two USB ports, both 480 Mbit/s, three CAN bus channels (one with CAN FD), two I²S Digital Audio, 1 S/PDIF Digital Audio, 1 SDIO (4 bit) native SD, SPI, all with 16 word FIFO ...