Arduino is an open-source hardware and software platform for building electronics projects. It provides a standard format for microcontrollers called boards that can be programmed to sense and control objects in the physical world. The Arduino platform is popular among engineers, developers, students and makers for prototyping due to its low cost and ease of use. Originally started as a university project, Arduino has grown into one of the most widely used hardware platforms in the world.
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Arduino
Arduino is an open-source hardware and software platform for building electronics projects. It provides a standard format for microcontrollers called boards that can be programmed to sense and control objects in the physical world. The Arduino platform is popular among engineers, developers, students and makers for prototyping due to its low cost and ease of use. Originally started as a university project, Arduino has grown into one of the most widely used hardware platforms in the world.
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Arduino
About Arduino
Arduino is giant open-source hardware and software
ecosystem. The Company offers variety of software and hardware tools and platforms, arduino offers its own language for developing and programming the board very conveniently only through a USB.
Arduino is a popular tool choice among engineers and developer
for product development as well as one of the most successful tools for STEM/STEAM education. Hundreds of thousands of designers, engineers, students, developers and makers around the world are using Arduino to innovate in music, games, toys, smart homes, farming, autonomous vehicles, and more along with thousands of DIY enthusiasts who find new use cases for the board continuously.
Arduino was Originally started just as a research project by
Massimo Banzi, David Cuartielles, Tom Igoe, Gianluca Martino, and David Mellis at the Interaction Design Institute of Ivrea in Italy in the early 2000s, a language for learning how to code within the context of the visual arts developed by Casey Reas and Ben Fry as well as a thesis project by Hernando Barragan about the Wiring board.
The first Arduino board was manufactured in 2005 to help design
engineering students who had no previous experience in electronics or microcontroller programming to create working prototypes connecting the physical world to the digital world. Since then arduino continuously increased their market share to the point it has become the most popular electronics prototyping tool used by engineers and even giant corporations due to its low cost. Arduino is the first mainstream Open Source Hardware project and was set up to build a community that could help share the use of the tool and take advantage from the offerings from hundreds of people who helped debug the code, build projects, make tutorials, supports other users on the forums and build thousands of groups around the world.
Since the start of Arduinos foundation, numerous new
development boards and software libraries have been presented, expanding and increasing the variety of possibilities accessible to the public community.
Currently, around a decade later, Arduino continues to deliver
open source hardware and software to bring creators ideas to life.
The plainness and ease of use of the project has directed
students, creators and engineers of micro controller based electronics projects and was a motivation in the creation of the DIY (Do It Yourself) Movement. Arduino has become the number one go to option for electronics makers, mainly for developing solutions for the IoT marketplace, which has been estimated to reach a $6 trillion milestone market by the end of 2021.
Arduinos architecture
Arduinos have a number of different chips and interfaces
composed on a single circuit board. The organization has changed over time, some models on the other hand contain other parts on top. But on a plain board, these parts are usually come in one integrated board:
▪ A number of pins, which are used to link with various
modules one might wish to incorporate with the Arduino. These pins can be one of two variations:
● Digital pins, which can read and write an individual notion,
on or off. Most Arduinos have 14 digital I/O pins. ● Analog pins, which can read an array of values, and are suitable for a more accurate control. Most Arduinos have six of these analog pins.
These pins are organized in a precise arrangement, so that if you
buy an add-on board designed to fit into them, typically called a “shield,” it should suit into most Arduino-compatible devices effortlessly.
▪ A power connector, that delivers power to both the device
itself, and provides a low voltage that can power connected components like LEDs and different sensors, provided their power requirements are reasonably low. The power connector can connect to either an AC adapter or even a small battery.
▪ A microcontroller, the main chip, which enables the
developer to program the Arduino in order for it to be capable to execute commands and make decisions based on various inputs either from a command or a signal retrieved from a sensor. The exact chip differs depending on what the type of the Arduino, but they are mostly Atmel controllers, usually a ATmega8, ATmega168, ATmega328, ATmega1280, or ATmega2560. The dissimilarities between these chips are subtle, but the major difference a beginner will notice is the different amounts of onboard memory.
▪ A serial connector, which on most newer boards is
implemented through a standard USB port. This connector allows you to communicate to the board from your computer, as well as load new programs onto the device. Often times Arduinos can also be powered through the USB port, removing the need for a separate power connection.
▪ A variety of other small components, like an oscillator
and/or a voltage regulator, which provide important capabilities to the board, although you typically don’t interact with these directly; just know that they are there.