[Dprglist] New Raspberry Pi RP2040 boards

Rud Merriam rudmerriam at gmail.com
Thu Jan 21 09:49:55 PST 2021


Looks like they are trying to compete with the Arduino market.


-73 -
*Rud Merriam K5RUD*
/Mystic Lake Software/ <http://mysticlakesoftware.com/>

On 1/21/21 10:30 AM, Doug Paradis via DPRGlist wrote:
> -All,
>     Another article of interest on the Rpi pico. Cost is $4, and has 
> micro python and C/C++ support.
> https://www.pcmag.com/news/4-raspberry-pi-pico-launches?utm_source=email&utm_campaign=whatsnewnow&utm_medium=title
>
> Regards,
> Doug P.
>
> On Thu, Jan 21, 2021 at 3:32 AM Murray Altheim via DPRGlist 
> <dprglist at lists.dprg.org <mailto:dprglist at lists.dprg.org>> wrote:
>
>     Summary: There are two new, small and low-cost Raspberry Pi
>     computer boards based on a new RP2040 chip (developed by the
>     Raspberry Pi Foundation), now or soon to be available, along with
>     a new line of accessories and carrier boards. There's also two
>     RP2040 boards from Adafruit using their Feather and ItsyBitsy
>     form factors.
>
>     ----
>
>     The RP2040 boards from Raspberry Pi are respectively called the Pico
>     and the Tiny2040 and are different from previous Raspberry Pis in that
>     they don't run a Linux operating system, they run either a single C/C+
>     or MicroPython program which is loaded (like an Arduino) over USB.
>
>     These boards are considerably smaller and lighter than other Pis, and
>     rather than dual-row GPIO pins their IO pins are spread around the
>     perimeter of the board.
>
>     The Pico is about the size of an Arduino Nano:
>
>        Raspberry Pi Pico
>     https://shop.pimoroni.com/products/raspberry-pi-pico    £3.60
>     https://www.adafruit.com/product/4883 (loose headers)    US$5.00
>     https://www.adafruit.com/product/4864 (no headers)       US$4.00
>
>     Pimoroni are releasing a series of support boards for the Pico, such
>     as:
>
>         Pico Explorer Base (LCD, mini breakboard, motor drivers, etc.
>         kinda nice for a small robot)
>     https://shop.pimoroni.com/products/pico-explorer-base   £22.20
>
>         Pico Breakout Garden Base
>     https://shop.pimoroni.com/products/pico-breakout-garden-base  £12
>
>     The latter provides 4 I2C and 2 SPI sockets for their Breakout Garden
>     series of sensors, displays, etc.
>
>     The Tiny is about the size of a postage stamp, with 12 IO pins, 4 as
>     optional 12-bit ADC channels:
>
>        Tiny 2040
>     https://shop.pimoroni.com/products/tiny-2040            £8.40
>
>     [It's notably more expensive than the Pico.]
>
>     Adafruit has also packaged the RP2040 in both their Feather and
>     ItsyBitsy form factors:
>
>        Adafruit Feather RP2040
>     https://www.adafruit.com/product/4884                   NA (yet)
>        Adafruit ItsyBitsy RP2040
>     https://www.adafruit.com/product/4888                   NA (yet)
>
>     Here's a description of the 2040 CPU:
>
>          About the RP2040
>
>          The RP2040 microcontroller is a dual core ARM Cortex M0+
>     running at
>          up to 133Mhz. It bundles in 264kB of SRAM, 30 multifunction GPIO
>          pins (including a four channel 12-bit ADC), a heap of standard
>          peripherals (I2C, SPI, UART, PWM, clocks, etc), and USB support.
>
>         One very exciting feature of the RP2040 microcontroller are the
>         programmable IOs which allow you to execute custom programs that
>         can manipulate GPIO pins and transfer data between peripherals -
>         they can offload tasks that require high data transfer rates or
>         precise timing that traditionally would have required a lot of
>         heavy lifting from the CPU.
>
>     As alluded to in that last paragraph, I'll be curious to see how any
>     of these RP2040 boards can be used as a slave processor when connected
>     to a Raspberry Pi, a topic we've been discussing a fair bit lately. In
>     the SDK documentation there's sections on how to connect to an RP2040
>     board from a Raspberry Pi over USB or GPIO, and how to connect to
>     a Mac
>     over USB. It looks like the GPIO connection is over UART.
>
>     The Pimoroni Pico product page at:
>
>     https://shop.pimoroni.com/products/raspberry-pi-pico
>
>     has a section at the bottom with links to some fairly extensive
>     documentation:
>
>        * Raspberry Pi Pico Datasheet - An RP2040-based microcontroller
>     board
>        * RP2040 Datasheet - A microcontroller by Raspberry Pi
>        * Hardware design with the RP2040 - Using the RP2040
>     microcontroller
>          to build boards and products
>        * Getting Started with Raspberry Pi Pico - C/C++ development with
>          the Pico and other RP2040-based microcontroller boards
>        * Pico C/C++ SDK - Libraries and tools for C/C++ development on the
>          RP2040 microcontroller
>        * Pico Python SDK - A MicroPython environment for the RP2040
>          microcontroller
>
>     Quite exciting!
>
>     Cheers,
>
>     Murray
>
>     [Legal Notice: I hold no fiduciary interest in Pimoroni, Adafruit,
>     foamtiles.com <http://foamtiles.com> or any other electronics or
>     foam tile wholesale or retail
>     establishment.]
>     ...........................................................................
>     Murray Altheim <murray18 at altheim dot com>            = =  ===
>     http://www.altheim.com/murray/                                  
>      ===  ===
>           = =  ===
>          In the evening
>          The rice leaves in the garden
>          Rustle in the autumn wind
>          That blows through my reed hut.
>                 -- Minamoto no Tsunenobu
>
>
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