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The Luckfox Pico Mini B – Linux in a Thumbnail
A while back during my spate of RK3588 reviews, I came across Luckfox and found their development boards intriguing, since it was marketed a...
My original idea was to leverage the Cortex A7 for building a tiny synthesiser with a bit more oomph than the Pi Pico ones that have been making the rounds–but that hasn’t come to pass, and the lack of wireless connectivity prevents me from using it in my home automation projects. But with four UARTs, you can hook up more MCUs and use the Luckfox Pico ’s SD card as a sensor data logger as well–I can see this being used in drones and other applications where you need a bit more processing power than a typical MCU. Well, for starters, I’d say the Luckfox Pico is for people who already have a code base that absolutely requires full POSIX compliance or is already running on ARMv7 chips and don’t want to mess with the complexity of porting it to a “plain” MCU.
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