(Hackaday.io has two Arduino clones using SVG pinouts: in SMT and DIP formats.) This is great for attaching small, powered sensors using a three-wire cable like the one that you use for servos. But they’ve also doubled them with pinheaders in a more hacker-friendly layout: SVG - signal, voltage, ground. The Alhambra board itself looks to be Arduino-compatible, with the horrible gap between the rows on the left-hand-side and all, so it will work with your existing shields. Now we know - it’s the support software for an FPGA “Arduino”. Indeed, we were wondering what the BQ folks were up to when they were working on an easy-to-use GUI for the FPGA family. It’s based on the Lattice iCE40 FPGA, which we’ve covered previously a number of times because of its cheap development boards and open-source development flow. What would you get it you mashed up an FPGA and an Arduino? An FPGA development board with far too few output pins? Or a board in the form-factor of Arduino that’s impossible to program?įortunately, the ICEZUM Alhambra looks like it’s avoided these pitfalls, at least for the most part.
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