There's a new Arduino board on the way to compete with Raspberry Pi, and the company is being absorbed into Qualcomm.
The single-board computer Arduino Uno Q gets a Qualcomm processor. It enables projects similar to a Raspberry Pi.
Qualcomm has made a move to acquire Arduino, which they will leverage for edge computing, robotics, and AI applications.
Windows/Mac/Linux: Programming an Arduino isn't especially difficult, but if you're looking for a more visual method, Scratch for Arduino (S4A) uses MIT's Scratch as a groundwork for teaching kids (or ...
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Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) disclosed on Tuesday that it is acquiring hardware startup Arduino to expand the San Diego-based ...
By combining Qualcomm Technologies’ processing, graphics, computer vision and AI with Arduino’s community, the company is ...
If you are used to coding with almost any modern tool except the Arduino IDE, you are probably accustomed to having on-chip debugging. Sometimes having that visibility inside the code makes all the ...
The UNO Q takes on the Raspberry Pi, which has single-board models ranging from as little as $20 to $132 for the feature-packed Raspberry Pi 5. That model has 16GB of RAM and a 2.4GHz quad-core Arm ...
Purchase of the Italian open-source hardware and software company aims to deepen Qualcomm’s presence in the edge computing, ...