Where is CY8CKIT-059?
I mentioned Cypress having various boards, but I guess I neglected to mention part numbers.
Shipping costs from the Cypress website is 15$. Which brings the CY8CKIT-059 or any other 10$ board to 25$. It is possible to get it on Aliexpress for 20$ shipped, or from distributor like mouser, farnell, digikey etc but it also add extra shipping costs.
@PCB.wiz: I added the NuMaker Uno (NUC131SD2AE) board, which costs 10$ with the actual 50% sales. Thanks for the tip
you missed out the entire ST Nucleo 32,64 & 144 series!
you missed out the entire ST Nucleo 32,64 & 144 series!
I second that, great boards and very cheap.
Nucleo 32 44 and 144 are indeed a good choice. Shipping costs if buying from the ST website are really high (if shipping outside USA) though (37$ to France).
Nucleo 32 44 and 144 are indeed a good choice. Shipping costs if buying from the ST website are really high (if shipping outside USA) though (37$ to France).
Yes, in that case you can check distributors, those boards are available at Mouser, Farnell and probably others (although you may not find ALL of those boards).
I added the nucleo serie to the list
I forgot to mention that this thread is about microcontroller, not application processor. I edited the title.
Oh, sorry. More mcu dev boards here:
https://os.mbed.com/platforms/
Nuvoton: M0516LAN, M058LAN, M052LAN, All under $5 (Aliexpress)
Nordic: BBC Micro:Bit (~$15, lots of places)
Atmel: Adafruit "ATSAMD09 Breakout with seesaw" $5
Thanks, I missed the Nuvoton boards on AliExpress.
BBC:MicroBit definitely has its place since it coup be a devboard for both the Nordic nrf51 and the Freescale KL26Z.
I also add the D09 breakout
GHI Electronics "Fez" (STM32F401RET6) - $10. Has C#/.Net support!(?)
TI is having one of their periodic "sales" on development tools this week. 12% off normal prices AND free shipping (I don't know if there are limits on that wrt destination country...). It includes several of their MSP432 ARM boards...
Jack Kilby changed the world of technology forever when he invented the integrated circuit at TI on September 12, 1958. This week, we celebrate Jack and his invention by offering 12% off select tools and free standard shipping.
What will you create?
With more than 30,000 products in stock, no MOQs, on-the-go mobile ordering, advanced package tracking with text updates, and multiple payment options, the TI store is your one-stop shop for ICs and evaluation tools.[/size][/font] |
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Thanks Westfw: I was able to get an MSP432 kit for less than 10€ delivered in France.
Thanks Westfw: I was able to get an MSP432 kit for less than 10€ delivered in France.
Great. I remember ordering one a couple years ago for about 12€! Pretty cheap indeed.
Those MCUs are not bad at all, I was actually considering them before selecting the STM32L4 line.
I have just cooked up SushiBits M23 Mini Pro, an ATSAML11D16A board with a STM32F042F6P6 as an onboard CMSIS-DAP debugger. It should be available at $9.99 + shipping on Tindie once I get the built-in debugger firmware ready. It has the same physical size of a DIP-24 0.6in chip - probably the smallest ARM development kit with built-in debugger ever.
I have just cooked up SushiBits M23 Mini Pro, an ATSAML11D16A board with a STM32F042F6P6 as an onboard CMSIS-DAP debugger. It should be available at $9.99 + shipping on Tindie once I get the built-in debugger firmware ready. It has the same physical size of a DIP-24 0.6in chip - probably the smallest ARM development kit with built-in debugger ever.
I added it to the list. I think it could be cool if you could expose both the STM and SAML SWD pins (Maybe this is already the case).
I have just cooked up SushiBits M23 Mini Pro, an ATSAML11D16A board with a STM32F042F6P6 as an onboard CMSIS-DAP debugger. It should be available at $9.99 + shipping on Tindie once I get the built-in debugger firmware ready. It has the same physical size of a DIP-24 0.6in chip - probably the smallest ARM development kit with built-in debugger ever.
I added it to the list. I think it could be cool if you could expose both the STM and SAML SWD pins (Maybe this is already the case).
It is already the case. However I don't think I can make it within US$10 right now due to what few vendors that carries SAM L11 jacking up prices.
If you step up to the sub-$30 bracket I have a lot more offerings, all of which Arduino capable:
* SushiBits One Pro v6 (designed for STM32F103/F303/L152, but also supports Chinese chips like GD32F103/F303, AT32F403 etc, built-in debugger based on DAP42)
* SushiBits ARM Classic Pro v2 (LPC2103 with DAP42 onboard debug, ARM7TDMI core)
Take another step up to sub-$50, you get Linux boards in form factors other than Arduino
* SushiBits Media 64 (Allwinner V3s with 64MB built-in DDR2, 64MB SPI Flash)
* SushiBits Media 512 (Allwinner A13 with 512MB DDR3 and 16GB or 32GB eMMC)