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Adafruit 3010 Feather M0 WiFi - ATSAMD21 ATWINC1500

Modelo 1F6GJVL6
Fabricante o sello Adafruit
Peso 0.05 Kg.
Precio:   $148,769.00
Si compra hoy, este producto se despachara y/o entregara entre el 05-05-2024 y el 13-05-2024
Descripción
-Titulo Original : Adafruit (PID 3010 Feather M0 WiFi - ATSAMD21 ATWINC1500

-Fabricante :

Adafruit

-Descripcion Original:

ATSAMD21G18 @ 48MHz with 3.3V logic/power - 256KB FLASH, 32KB SRAM, No EEPROM // This FCC-certified WiFi module works with 802.11b, g, or n networks and supports WEP, WPA and WPA2 encryption // USB native support, comes with USB bootloader and serial port debugging // You also get tons of pins - 20 GPIO pins Hardware Serial, hardware I2C, hardware SPI support 8 x PWM pins 10 x analog inputs 1 x analog output // Measures 2.1" x 0.9" x 0.3" (53.65mm x 23mm x 8mm) without headers soldered in. Note it is 0.1" longer than most Feathers // Feather is the new development board from Adafruit, and like its namesake it is thin, light, and lets you fly! We designed Feather to be a new standard for portable microcontroller cores. This is the Adafruit Feather M0 WiFi w/ATWINC1500 - our take on an 'all-in-one' Arduino-compatible + high speed, reliable WiFi with built in USB and battery charging. Its an Adafruit Feather M0 with a WiFi module, ready to rock! We have other boards in the Feather family, check'em out here. Connect your Feather to the Internet with this fine new FCC-certified WiFi module from Atmel. This 802.11bgn-capable WiFi module is the best new thing for networking your devices, with built-in low-power management capabilites, Soft-AP, SSL TSL 1.2 support and rock solid performance. We were running our adafruit.io MQTT demo for a full weekend straight with no hiccups (it would have run longer but we had to go to work, so we unplugged it). This module is very fast and easy to use in comparison to other WiFi modules we've used in the past. This module works with 802.11b, g, or n networks and supports WEP, WPA and WPA2 encryption. You can connect to your own WiFi networks or create your own with Soft AP mode, where it becomes its own access point (we have an example of it creating a webserver that you can then control the Arduino's pins). You can clock it as fast as 12MHz for speedy, reliable packet streaming. And scanning/connecting to networks is very fast, just a second or two. A highly-capable Cortex M0+ processor with ton more I/O pins, lots of 12-bit ADCs, a 10-bit DAC, 6 total SERCOMs that can each do SPI, I2C or UART (3 are used by the existing interfaces, leaving you 3), plenty of timers, PWMs, DMA, native USB, and more
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