There's a new Arduino board on the way to compete with Raspberry Pi, and the company is being absorbed into Qualcomm.
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 claims Arduino will keep its own branding and "open-source ethos." ...
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.
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 ...
Discover the Arduino Uno Q, a dual-processor development board perfect for IoT, robotics, and AI projects. Versatility meets power in a ...
The chipmaker’s acquisition brings its Dragonwing-powered board and new AppLab development environment to a 33 million–strong open-source community.
The single-board computer Arduino Uno Q gets a Qualcomm processor. It enables projects similar to a Raspberry Pi.
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 also launching a Qualcomm-equipped Uno Q that functions as a single-board computer and microcontroller.
Generally people equate the Arduino hardware platforms with MCU-centric options that are great for things like low-powered embedded computing, but less for running desktop operating systems. This ...
The Arduino brand will remain for future products as it becomes part of the Qualcomm business. Plus, there's a brand-new Arduino Uno Q single-board computer.