Grove: Difference between revisions

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Brian Wilson (talk | contribs)
Created page with "12/22 I got some Grove parts including Can Bus adapters from Seeed Studio, some proto boards, and a Pi hat. == Pi Hat == Tutorial is here: https://wiki.seeedstudio.com/Grove_Base_Hat_for_Raspberry_Pi_Zero/ This $9.80 board has its own ARM Cortex M0 MCU. I did not anticipate that, thought it would simply have connectors on it. Seems like I could load custom firmware on it and not even bother to connect a Pi Zero. :-) The firmware package has an Arduino test program..."
 
Brian Wilson (talk | contribs)
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There is a port that lets you burn new firmware into the Cortex MCU.
There is a port that lets you burn new firmware into the Cortex MCU.


[[:Category:IoT|Category: IoT]]
[[Category: IoT]]
[[Category: Embedded]]
[[Category: Electronics]]

Revision as of 00:34, 13 February 2023

12/22 I got some Grove parts including Can Bus adapters from Seeed Studio, some proto boards, and a Pi hat.

Pi Hat

Tutorial is here: https://wiki.seeedstudio.com/Grove_Base_Hat_for_Raspberry_Pi_Zero/

This $9.80 board has its own ARM Cortex M0 MCU. I did not anticipate that, thought it would simply have connectors on it. Seems like I could load custom firmware on it and not even bother to connect a Pi Zero. :-) The firmware package has an Arduino test program in it.

The board includes a 12-bit ADC with 3 analog Grove ports

The UART port passes through to the Raspberry Pi GPIO on GPIO14 and GPIO15

There is a port that lets you burn new firmware into the Cortex MCU.