![]() ![]() That said, I did have one apprehension: I am very much a C programmer (just check out the rest of this blog) and the board seemed to be a little more geared towards MicroPython rather than C. You can check it all out on their Getting started page, which might provide the best welcome experience to a microcontroller dev board I’ve ever had. The chip (RP2040) and the dev kit have got some extremely high quality accompanying datasheets and tutorials. Shop around! Moving onīefore the boards arrived, I started looking up the documentation, and I was again pleasantly surprised. Sad!Īlso, while I could post an Amazon affiliate link for purchase I won’t, since the current Amazon listings are nearly double the prices available on other websites. I was not paid to produce this content, nor was I given anything free. I bought a couple immediately - the $4 pricetag for a USB-ready dev board is pretty competitive in this space. I say “surprising” for a number of reasons: (1) until now, Raspberry Pi have focused on their eponymous single-board computer series, (2) the chip has some interesting and unusual hardware (no on-chip flash paired with an exuberant amount of SRAM and a strange new I/O peripheral they call “Programmable I/O”, and (3) the first dev board they’d produced was actually available in heaps of different websites all at once on day 1! Rpi pico rp2040 thonny embedded micropython opinionĪ few days ago the Raspberry Pi foundation made the surprise announcement that they’d had their own silicon produced in the form of a dual-core ARM Cortex M0+ microcontroller. ![]()
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