This page (revision-14) was last changed on 2020-06-05 22:04 by Murray Altheim

This page was created on 2020-05-24 01:48 by Murray Altheim

Only authorized users are allowed to rename pages.

Only authorized users are allowed to delete pages.

Page revision history

Version Date Modified Size Author Changes ... Change note
14 2020-06-05 22:04 7 KB Murray Altheim to previous
13 2020-05-24 11:46 7 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
12 2020-05-24 11:44 7 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
11 2020-05-24 11:44 7 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
10 2020-05-24 10:58 7 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
9 2020-05-24 05:04 6 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
8 2020-05-24 03:52 6 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
7 2020-05-24 03:22 6 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
6 2020-05-24 02:48 6 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
5 2020-05-24 02:34 5 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
4 2020-05-24 02:28 5 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
3 2020-05-24 02:19 4 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
2 2020-05-24 02:15 4 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
1 2020-05-24 01:48 2 KB Murray Altheim to last

Page References

Incoming links Outgoing links

Version management

Difference between version and

At line 3 changed one line
The __[Arduino Yún|ArduinoYún]__ is unusual in that it combines what is effectively a 16MHz [Arduino] Leonardo microcontroller with an [Atheros AR9331|https://www.openhacks.com/uploadsproductos/ar9331_datasheet.pdf], a 400MHz microprocessor running OpenWrt (a version of [Linux]), so it's a bit like a combination of an Arduino and a [Raspberry Pi] on one board.
The __[Arduino Yún|ArduinoYún]__ is unusual in that it combines what is effectively a 16MHz [Arduino Leonardo|https://store.arduino.cc/usa/leonardo] microcontroller with an [Atheros AR9331|https://www.openhacks.com/uploadsproductos/ar9331_datasheet.pdf], a 400MHz microprocessor running OpenWrt (a version of [Linux|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux]), so it's a bit like a combination of an [Arduino] and a [Raspberry Pi] on one board the size of the Arduino Uno.
At line 47 added one line
* When expanding the filesystem you'll be asked the size of the data partition in MB. This is the size of the partition used for the OS, with the rest of the SD card used for your applications and data. I used a 32MB SD card so I set the data partition to 1000 (1GB) leaving about 30GB of space for my workspace. Once you've done the partitioning the expansion sketch will run again, asking you to proceed. Unless you like getting into infinite loops just say "no".