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The Arduino/Genuino 101 is the board that puts the STEAM in STEM education. Where the Curie is Going Intel has big plans for the Curie module, with a few products in the works already.
Intel will continue to accept orders for the Arduino 101 development board from September 17 to December 17 this year. That said, it will no longer release any updates to its Curie Open Developer Kit.
Now we know. Intel just announced at Maker Faire Rome that the first product to use the Curie module is a brand new, low-cost Arduino board called Arduino 101.
Intel is taking aim at the DIY, maker, and education markets with a new Arduino-compatible developer board powered by the company’s new low-power Quark X1000 system-on-a-chip.
Intel’s new button-sized system-on-a-chip, Curie, will be incorporated into a next-generation Arduino board called the Arduino 101, making it the first device to ship with a Curie module.
The Intel Galileo will be the first in a line of development boards on the company's architecture. Arduino already has 19 boards. A board from Arduino, an open source hardware development community.
The Intel Galileo reference board isn't a basic board. The Quark SoC is quite potent for a device of this type, resembling a Pentium 3 more than a microcontroller. Though the legacy Arduino ...
Intel will stop making its Curie chip for wearables and its Arduino 101 maker board. Written by Liam Tung, Contributing Writer July 26, 2017 at 2:33 a.m. PT ...
Through a partnership with Arduino announced at the Maker Faire in Rome, though, Intel will build Arduino-compatible electronics boards called Galileo that use its 32-bit Pentium-class Quark ...
Helping to expand native usage and capabilities beyond the Arduino shield ecosystem, the Intel development board comes standard with several computing industry standard I/O interfaces, including ...
Intel's Galileo development board built in partnership with open-source hardware developer Arduino runs Linux and sports the single-core, 32-bit Quark SoC X1000.
Intel’s Arduino-certified Galileo development board was already likely on its way out, given that Microsoft dropped support for the platform in its Windows 10 IoT Core product in 2015.
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