News

Every week the Hackaday tip line receives an email about a new dev board. The current trend is towards ARM devices, and only once have we seen an x86-based device. Today that count went up to two. … ...
Schools are a big target for Intel too – it’s worked out that students are starting to learn about computers with low cost ARM devices like the Raspberry Pi and not x86 CPUs, and it doesn’t like that.
We love the simplicity of Arduino for focused tasks, we love how Raspberry Pi GPIO pins open a doorway to a wide world of peripherals, and we love the software ecosystem of Intel’s x86 instru… ...
But this isn’t just a mini computer with an x86 processor. It’s also an Arduino-compatible device thanks to an integrated ARM Cortex-M0+ co-processor.
The new Arduino Due sports a considerably beefier set of stats, incorporating a 32-bit ARM-based microcontroller that can run up to 96 MHz. For comparison, standard Arduinos normally have an 8-bit ...
Arduino’s Massimo Banzi explains more about the new partnership and what it means for Arduino : During a very hot day in spring I visited California to meet with Arm.
In a move away from its original ARM-based boards, UDOO is launching an Intel-based maker board compatible with Arduino 101 shields and capable of running Linux, Windows or Android.
Arduino Education has just launched the Braccio++ robotic arm for advanced students in high school or at university in order to let them experiment with a 6 DOF, industrial, assembly line-inspired ...
I'm using Arduino 1.8.5 on Windows 7 x64. I installed stm32duino by following these instructions from the stm32duino wiki. It installed the latest Arduino SAM Boards version 1.6.12. I installed into ...