The LPCXpresso family of circuit boards provides a powerful and flexible development system for NXP Cortex-M microcontrollers. The LPCXpresso54114 circuit board was developed by NXP to support the evaluation and prototyping of the LPC54110 series MCU. Its low power consumption feature can help you easily start your project design. LPCXpresso™ is a low-cost development platform provided by NXP that supports NXP's Arm-based microcontrollers. The platform includes a simplified Eclipse-based IDE and low-cost target boards with a JTAG debugger. LPCXpresso is an end-to-end solution that supports embedded engineers developing applications from initial evaluation to final production.
Use AT89C2051 to make your own smart home wireless alarm.
Quadcopter main control board design schematic diagram and PCB
CANFDuino supports CANFD, the latest version of the CAN bus standard, which can accommodate speeds up to 5 Mbps. It has two local ports with DB9 connectors in a housing that can be mounted on your vehicle or installed in your own projects. The platform is designed for tinkerers, hackers, and industry professionals looking for a ready-made, open source CAN bus solution that requires little or no hardware assembly.
STM32 Nucleo-64 development board using STM32F410RB MCU, supporting Arduino and ST morpho connections
Embedded small module for SPC58 H series in BGA386 package
Embedded small module for SPC58 B/C/E series in eTQFP100 package. Requires SPC57XXMB
M52223EVB Evaluation and Development System for ColdFire
Breakout board featuring VL53L1X long range ranging sensor for easy integration into customer equipment
Embedded small form factor module for SPC58 C series in eLQFP176 package.
Quickly establish secure connections between simulated electric vehicle power equipment (EVSE) and Microsoft Azure IoT Central applications using the cloud-connected EasyEVSE electric vehicle charging station development platform. The platform demonstrates how telemetry data can be exchanged to manage simulated EVSEs, as well as how the EV status and low-level signals can be managed.