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The Arduino Nano 33 BLE Rev2 is a significant leap forward in the world of microcontroller boards, designed to empower a diverse array of projects with its advanced capabilities.
This user-friendly approach is what sets the Arduino Cloud apart in the IoT landscape. The addition of the Arduino Nano ESP32 board support to the Arduino Cloud is a significant milestone.
The Raspberry Pi Pico is both faster and cheaper than the Arduino Nano, but the nano has better resources and community.
Arduino has announced four new Nano microcontroller-based boards that will be available for developers and makers in late July.
So you've already outgrown Arduino's most beginner-friendly board, the Uno, and are looking to move on to bigger, more exciting projects. In that case, the Nano family might just be what you need ...
According to Arduino, the Nano ESP32 brings plug-and-play IoT deployments to advanced enterprise use cases and hobbyist engineers. The Nano ESP32 18×45-mm development board is available to order today ...
The PCB manufacturing for the Arduino Nano currently places components on both sides of the board, requiring two operations for solder paste, pick-and-place, and reflow.
Saw this one on twitter and thought it worth sharing on Gadget Master: a screw version adapter for the Arduino Nano to help with prototyping, and to avoid soldering... The 'with headers' option is ...
Arduino boards are very cool little system boards that let you do all sorts of cool electronics tricks by adding a few sensors and writing some code on your PC or Mac. Now theere is the Adruino ...
The same trick will probably work with any older Arduino boards you have laying around if Optiboot supports them. What can you do with the extra memory? Maybe speech recognition?