This page (revision-15) was last changed on 2021-05-07 09:36 by Murray Altheim

This page was created on 2021-03-08 04:23 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
15 2021-05-07 09:36 7 KB Murray Altheim to previous
14 2021-05-07 09:31 7 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
13 2021-03-09 09:47 7 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
12 2021-03-09 09:33 7 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
11 2021-03-09 09:33 7 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
10 2021-03-09 09:26 6 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
9 2021-03-09 09:22 6 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
8 2021-03-09 09:15 5 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
7 2021-03-08 05:22 5 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
6 2021-03-08 05:04 4 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
5 2021-03-08 04:47 4 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
4 2021-03-08 04:44 4 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
3 2021-03-08 04:37 2 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
2 2021-03-08 04:35 2 KB Murray Altheim to previous | to last
1 2021-03-08 04:23 1 KB Murray Altheim to last

Page References

Incoming links Outgoing links

Version management

Difference between version and

At line 1 changed one line
On the 21st of January, 2021, the Raspberry Pi Foundation released its own [microcontroller] board called the __[Raspberry Pi Pico|RaspberryPiPico]__. Despite its name, the Pico is a __microcontroller__, not a small __microcomputer__ (i.e., a Single Board Computer or SBC) like the [Raspberry Pi], uses a different CPU chipset (the __RP2040__, a proprietary design by the Raspberry Pi Foundation), and is significantly smaller and cheaper than any Pi at ''US$4''.
%%alias
Aliased from [Pico]
%%
At line 3 changed one line
It comes with a C SDK, a GCC-based toolchain, Visual Studio Code integration, and can be programmed in __[Micropython]__. The RP2040 CPU is currently available in the Pico form factor as released by the Raspberry Pi Foundation, but announcements have been made by many vendors like Adafruit and Pimoroni for Feather, Itsy Bitsy, QT, Tiny, and other familiar designs.
On the 21st of January, 2021, the Raspberry Pi Foundation released its own [microcontroller] board called the __[Raspberry Pi Pico|RaspberryPiPico]__. Despite its name, the Pico is a __microcontroller__, not a small __microcomputer__ (i.e., a Single Board Computer or SBC) like the [Raspberry Pi], uses a different CPU chipset (the __[RP2040]__, a proprietary design by the Raspberry Pi Foundation), and is significantly smaller and cheaper than any Pi at ''US$4''.
At line 7 added one line
It comes with a C SDK, a GCC-based toolchain, Visual Studio Code integration, and can be programmed in __[Micropython]__. The [RP2040] CPU is currently available in the Pico form factor as released by the Raspberry Pi Foundation, but announcements have been made by many vendors like Adafruit and Pimoroni for Feather, Itsy Bitsy, QT, Tiny, and other familiar designs.
At line 9 added one line
At line 103 changed one line
[{Tag Pico}]
[{Tag Pico RP2040}]