Arduino

Articles related to Arduino
Open Source

Arduino PRO Industrial Kits Available Only from Newark - News

July 29, 2024

Chicago, Illinois. Innovative Arduino PRO industrial kits are available exclusively from Newark and Avnet. The kits are developed to aid professionals and hobbyists in meeting challenges associated with the advance development of specialized projects. The Arduino PRO offers tools such as advanced microcontrollers, sensors, and actuators.

Open Source

Mouser New Product of the Week: Arduino UNO REV 4 Boards - Story

November 13, 2023

Arduino microcontroller development boards are one of the most popular solutions among DIY developers, students, and hobbyists/maker pros who are dabbling in and/or seriously pursuing electronics and programming projects like prototyping, IoT, embedded systems, DIY electronics, and simple learning and education pursuits.

Security

World’s First SoM to Comply with EU Security Laws - News

September 27, 2023

London, England. Foundries.​io has utilized its security technology and teamed up with Arduino to release the Arduino Portenta X8, the first system-on-module (SoM) to adhere to the constraints of the European Union’s Cyber Resilience Act (CRA). Leveraging the Portenta X8 SOM, designers have the ability to manage device authentication, secure storage, provisioning, a SBOM, and OTA updating, in one cloud platform.

Open Source

Embedded Executive: Fabio Violante, CEO, Arduino - Podcast

October 26, 2022

There are few products more popular in the embedded space than the Arduino development board. What makes that statement even more interesting has to do with the number of dev boards that have become available over the last few years.

IoT

The Arduino Pro Portenta H7 Lite Connected Released for Industrial-Strength Solutions - News

October 11, 2021

The newest addition to the Portenta family is powerful, cost-effective, and ready to connect.

Open Source

Simplify Code With Arduino Functions - Blog

June 10, 2021

Arduino boards, and the Arduino IDE is wonderful for creating small snippets of code that can activate an LED, read a sensor, activate a servo, or any number of unique physical computing applications. Such actions generally start out simple–e.g. blinking an LED on a timer–but can eventually become quite complicated as programs expand and the programmer’s skills increase.