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Can anyone recommend a #RasPi alternative for #embedded #electronics projects? There's the #Arduino, which is nice, but sometimes you need something with a little more oomph.
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Michał
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Jonathan Lamothe likes this.
Ray Kelm
in reply to Michał • • •@RicoElectrico I'll second the recommendation on ESP32. I probably have 10 of them now and they are quite capable.
That said, the Pi Pico is decent too, especially if you have unusual high speed signaling requirements.
Jonathan Lamothe
in reply to Ray Kelm • •Guillaume Rossolini
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •my current project is doing just that and with #esp32
[edit]This setup uses a handful of #esp8266 with sensors, all in a mesh with network, plus one esp32-c3 as the bridge to the normal home WiFi network, and a #RaspberryPi Zero for data storage
infosec.exchange/@GuillaumeRos…
Guillaume Rossolini (@GuillaumeRossolini@infosec.exchange)
Infosec ExchangeJonathan Lamothe
in reply to Michał • •Shae Erisson
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •I buy from AdaFruit. Their boards are more powerful than the Arduino, and not as powerful as a Raspberry Pi.
If I need an operating system, I plug an AdaFruit board into a Raspberry Pi.
My most popular project in that area is: github.com/shapr/bloohm
GitHub - shapr/bloohm: visual bloom filter to display process status as neotrellis m4 output
GitHubrhempel
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Bonkers
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •BardMoss
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Sconient
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Arduino produces a range of boards, including ones that are far more powerful than the Uno.
I would recommend the Pi Pico though if you're looking for something faster than the Uno and still cheap. There's Arduino IDE support for them as well.
Patrick Van Oosterwijck
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Jonathan Lamothe likes this.
Jonathan Lamothe
in reply to Patrick Van Oosterwijck • •Michael T. Richter
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Jonathan Lamothe
in reply to Michael T. Richter • •Michael T. Richter
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Patrick Van Oosterwijck
in reply to Michael T. Richter • • •Michael T. Richter
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Patrick Van Oosterwijck
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •wESP32 - wESP32 — Wired ESP32 with PoE
wesp32.comÖlbaum
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •@xorbit I just started using one, a C6 (that’s what they had in stock in the shop where I was ordering the other stuff.)
I program it with the Arduino CLI, because that’s what I’m used to and I don’t want to learn another toolchain before I know if I need to. I’m impressed so far. The dev board is cheaper than an Arduino Nano, it has many features, WiFi, Bluetooth, Flash memory is very flexible.
docs.espressif.com/projects/es…
ESP32-C6-DevKitM-1 - - — esp-dev-kits latest documentation
docs.espressif.comWilliam
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •depends on your use case. Pi and Arduino are extremely different beasts.
Do you need lots of GPIO? Network? Wi-Fi? Memory? Flash? Camera/LCD connections? Floating point or integer only? A multitasking OS (with X! and a GPU!), an RTOS, or bare metal? Interoperability with some ecosystem? With good community support or something raw that you can slog through in god-mode and never need to update?
Jonathan Lamothe
in reply to William • •silverwizard
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Jonathan Lamothe
in reply to silverwizard • •Greg A. Woods
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Board Selection - BeagleBoard
Beagleboard.orgcircfruit
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •