Over the years, we’ve seen some modern microcontrollers turn out to be 5V-tolerant – now, RP2040 joins the crowd. Half a year ago, when we covered an ISA card based on a Pi Pico, [Eben Upton] left a ...
[Kevin O’Connor] writes to us about his project, can2040 – adding CAN support to the RP2040. The RP2040 doesn’t have a CAN peripheral, but [Kevin] wrote code for the RP2040’s PIO engine that can ...
Raspberry Pi’s microcontroller, the RP2040, has some unusual features. And one of these is the i-o state machine, of which there are eight. spread over two ‘PIO blocks’ – (one shown right). According ...
If you’re interested in learning more about the latest addition to the Raspberry Pi range in the form of the Raspberry Pi Pico microcontroller and its new Raspberry Silicon, a new article published to ...
An overview of the RP2040 system. Choosing between a Raspberry Pi and an RP2040. Industrial applications that leverage Pi. 1. The new Raspberry Pico with the RP2040 (left) is a more compact version of ...
Raspberry Pi is now offering its RP2040 chip that powers the Raspberry Pi Pico at discounted bulk prices. The ARM-based RP2040, its first microcontroller, was available for $1 a piece when it launched ...
Today the first Raspberry Pi microcontroller was released for approximately $4 USD. This device is the Raspberry Pi Pico, built on RP2040, a "brand-new chip" developed at Raspberry Pi. This device ...
The Olimex RP2040pc is a compact single-board computer that measures 80 x 65mm (3.15″ x 2.56″) and features four USB 2.0 ports, two USB Type-C ports (one for power and one for programming), and HDMI, ...
The Banana Pi BPI-Pico-RP2040 is a tiny, low-power single-board computer that looks a lot like the Raspberry Pi Pico… and should be compatible with most Pico-powered projects, since it has the same ...
The official Arduino Team this week revealed more details about support for the new Raspberry Pi RP2040 chip being made available for the official Arduino Mbed Core, ahead of the upcoming Arduino Nano ...
I want to flag this Badger board from Pimoroni, which was previously featured on the Engineer In Wonderland blog but is well worth highlighting here on Gadget Master, too. Building on the Raspberry Pi ...