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Arduino was expected to be useful "in that particular tiny context," but it morphed into something much bigger. "It sort of escaped the lab—let's put it this way, you know like a virus—and ...
Whether you’re buying products, subscribing to Arduino Cloud, or making donations, your support fuels the continued development and maintenance of these open-source projects. The 2023 Arduino ...
Throughout 2022 the Arduino community had three new open source hardware products, the new Lab for MicroPython, the language discussion space, 1,042 new libraries (+25% in one year), 421 new open ...
The 2022 Arduino Open Source Report is out, Arduino’s annual overview of its open source relationships and work. It covers a lot of ground… “In the last yearly report we described 2021 as one of the ...
The Arduino open-source microcontroller platform can be programmed and equipped to perform a nearly endless list of functions. It’s likely the best all-around centerpiece to a modern electronics ...
Arduino may be known for revolutionizing open source hardware platforms, but this week it enters the 3D printer market with the small and affordable Materia 101. Produced in partnership with ...
Version 1.6.4 of the Arduino IDE has been out for a little while now, and it has a couple of notable changes. To our eyes, the most interesting change makes adding support for non-standard boards a… ...
Microsoft is teaming up with Arduino to bring Windows 10 to the company's microcontroller boards, with the first step being the release of two open source libraries that connect Arduinos to ...
The palm-sized Arduino serves as an electronic brain running everything from high school robots to high-end art installations. It is an effort to bring an open-source development approach to ...
Arduino is described by its makers as “an open-source electronics prototyping platform based on flexible, easy-to-use hardware and software,” whatever that means.
Open the Arduino software and paste the Arduino code (the text in the box near the bottom of the post) into a new sketch. Click Sketch > Verify / Compile to make sure the code is properly in there.