Qualcomm has acquired Arduino, maker of microcontrollers (and now single-board computers), in a move designed to boost its presence in edge computing, as evidenced by a new Arduino product based on ...
There's a new Arduino board on the way to compete with Raspberry Pi, and the company is being absorbed into Qualcomm.
Arduino is also launching a Qualcomm-equipped Uno Q that functions as a single-board computer and microcontroller.
Chip maker Qualcomm Qualcomm has announced its planning to acquire Arduino, a company that makes open source hardware & software including single-board microcontroller kits.
Qualcomm and Arduino have both stated that they are committed to openness, and schematics and design files for the UNO Q will be released under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license. As well, the new Arduino App Lab ...
The deal gives Qualcomm access to millions of developers and extends its strategy for embedded devices, which now extends across hardware, software, AI and tooling.
Arduino is an enormously popular platform for Makers and hackers. This TechXchange explores how the venerable Arduino can be used in professional developing. Arduino is an open-source hardware and ...
The chipmaker’s acquisition brings its Dragonwing-powered board and new AppLab development environment to a 33 million–strong open-source community.
Purchase of the Italian open-source hardware and software company aims to deepen Qualcomm’s presence in the edge computing, robotics, and AI development markets.
Discover how the Qualcomm, Arduino partnership could transform embedded systems and redefine open-source innovation. Uno Q is a new board ...
Avalue’s ACP-3566-PI and ACP-IMX8-PI industrial-grade SBCs are fully Raspberry Pi hardware-compatible, supporting MIPI, GPIO, and HATs. Powered by NXP i.MX8M or Rockchip SoCs, they’re built for a wide ...
Small Granite 4.0 models are available today, with ‘thinking,’ medium, and nano variants releasing later this year. F-Droid says Google's developer registration rule could end its open-source app ...