Comparison of single-board microcontrollers: Difference between revisions

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| A USB board for breadboarding, manufactured and sold as a kit by Fundamental Logic.
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| IMUduino<ref name="IMUduino-About">[http://www.femtoduino.com/spex/imuduino-btle] , specifications</ref>
| Femtoduino.com<ref name="Femtoduino">[http://www.femtoduino.com] , Femtoduino.com website</ref>
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| ATmega32U4
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| [[File:Jeenode-v6.jpg|alt=JeeNode|left|frameless]]Low-cost, low-size, radio-enabled Arduino-compatible board running at 3.3&nbsp;V. Inspired by the Modern Device RBBB (above) with a HopeRF RFM12B wireless module and a modular I/O design supporting a wide range of interfaces.<ref name="Auto7L-72" />
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| LCDuino<ref name="LCDuino-About">[http://www.geppettoelectronics.com/search/label/LCDuino] , LCDuino blog</ref>
| Geppetto Electronics
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| [[File:MoteinoR4.jpg|alt=Moteino|left|frameless]] An SD-card size wireless-enabled breadboard friendly Arduino compatible board running at 16&nbsp;MHz/3.3&nbsp;V. It can mate with either an RFM12B or RFM69W/HW/CW transceiver from HopeRF, allowing very low cost wireless communication (also available without a transceiver). [[File:Moteino_types_&_options.jpg|right|frameless|These are the different types of available Moteino boards and their transceiver options.]] Programmable from the Arduino IDE through an FTDI cable/adapter, or directly through the USB interface (Moteino-USB revision). Moteino runs DualOptiboot,<ref name="DualOptiboot-About">[https://github.com/LowPowerLab/DualOptiboot] DualOptiboot</ref> a custom version of Optiboot that allows wireless programming when external FLASH memory is present. The new MoteinoMEGA based on ATmega1284P offers more I/O, an extra hardware serial port, a massive 128&nbsp;KB of flash for sketches and 16&nbsp;KB of RAM (8X more!).
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| NavSpark<ref name="NavSpark" />
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| Similar to a USB key.
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| Teensy 2.0<ref>[https://www.pjrc.com/store/teensy.html] PJRC Teensy 2.0</ref>
| [http://www.pjrc.com PJRC]
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| ATmega32U4 8 bit AVR 16&nbsp;MHz <ref name="pjrc_teensy">[https://www.pjrc.com/teensy] PJRC teensy variants</ref>
|16&nbsp;MHz
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}} Boards from PJRC.com that run most Arduino sketches using the Teensyduino software add-on to the Arduino IDE.
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| Teensy 2.0++<ref>[https://www.pjrc.com/store/teensypp.html] PJRC Teensy 2.0++</ref>
| [http://www.pjrc.com PJRC]
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}}A slightly more powerful version of the Teensy 2.0. It has 46 I/O pins; 8&nbsp;KB RAM; 128 kB of flash; 10-bit ADC; UART, SPI, I²C, I²S, Touch and other I/O capability.
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| Teensy 3.0<ref>[https://www.pjrc.com/store/teensy3.html] , PRJC Teensy 3.0</ref>
| [http://www.pjrc.com PJRC]
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| A very small board based on the Freescale MK20DX128VLH5 CPU. It has 34 I/O pins; 16&nbsp;KB RAM; 128 kB of flash; 16-bit ADC; 3xUARTs, SPI, I²C, I²S, Touch and other I/O capability. Version 3.0 is not recommended for new designs.
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| Teensy 3.1/3.2<ref>[https://www.pjrc.com/teensy/teensy31.html] PJRC Teensy 3.1/3.2</ref>
| [http://www.pjrc.com PJRC]
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