There's a new Arduino board on the way to compete with Raspberry Pi, and the company is being absorbed into Qualcomm.
Qualcomm has made a move to acquire Arduino, which they will leverage for edge computing, robotics, and AI applications.
The single-board computer Arduino Uno Q gets a Qualcomm processor. It enables projects similar to a Raspberry Pi.
Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) disclosed on Tuesday that it is acquiring hardware startup Arduino to expand the San Diego-based ...
Arduino UNO Q, Arduino’s first dual-brain board powered by the Qualcomm Dragonwing platform, bridges HPC with real-time ...
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 ...
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 ...
Qualcomm on Tuesday said it has acquired Arduino, an Italian not-for-profit firm that makes hardware and software for ...
Purchase of the Italian open-source hardware and software company aims to deepen Qualcomm’s presence in the edge computing, ...