How on the heels of the Arduino Uno Q, the new offering in conjunction with Qualcomm is the Arduino Ventuno Q:
Here's a run down of the specifications:
- Main Processor (MPU): Qualcomm Dragonwing IQ‑8275 (octa‑core Arm CPU with Adreno 623 GPU and AI accelerator up to ~40 TOPS)
- Microcontroller (MCU): STM32H5F5 (Arm Cortex‑M33 running at ~250 MHz)
- MCU Memory: 4 MB Flash, 1.5 MB RAM
- System Memory: 16 GB LPDDR5 RAM
- Onboard Storage: 64 GB eMMC
- Storage Expansion: M.2 slot (NVMe SSD support, PCIe Gen 4)
- Wireless Connectivity: Wi‑Fi 6 (2.4 / 5 / 6 GHz), Bluetooth 5.3
- Wired Networking: 2.5 Gigabit Ethernet (RJ45)
- USB Ports:
- 1 × USB‑C (power, data, DisplayPort Alt Mode)
- 2 × USB 3.0 Type‑A
- GPIO & Expansion:
- 40‑pin GPIO header (Raspberry Pi compatible)
- Arduino UNO‑style shield compatibility
- Qwiic / I²C connectors
- Camera Support: Up to 3 × MIPI‑CSI camera interfaces
- Display Outputs:
- HDMI
- MIPI‑DSI
- USB‑C DisplayPort Alt Mode
- Audio: Microphone input and audio output via onboard headers
- Industrial Interfaces: Multiple CAN‑FD interfaces (with and without PHY)
- Power Input:
- USB‑C: 5V up to 3A
- Barrel jack: 12–24V DC
- Screw terminal: 7–24V DC
- Dimensions: Approximately 160 × 100 × 25.8 mm
- Software Support: Linux (Ubuntu / Debian) on MPU and Arduino-compatible environment (Zephyr-based) on MCU
I've forwarded a few of my own questions to Arduino that I'll post to the element14 Community, mainly revolving around what's supported over the HDMI and DisplayPort, along with a 'high speed connector' it has available (and how that's used), but what we'd really like is to get some of these into your hands - maybe as a RoadTest or some kind of experimenting with competition.
I'm seeing a lot of microcontroller boards that straddle microcontroller hardware now, especially that they run 'ai models', but I'm not sure that people have gotten to grips with this yet, what's your level of working with them?
The answers from this will help us to tailor content from Arduino for the Community.