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  • Author Author: e14phil
  • Date Created: 13 Jan 2021 5:44 PM Date Created
  • Last Updated Last Updated: 27 Jan 2021 3:48 PM
  • Views 19503 views
  • Likes 20 likes
  • Comments 128 comments
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Raspberry Pi Pico

image

Raspberry Pi Pico

 

Buy NowBuy Now
Buy Now from CPCBuy Now from CPC

 

We are very excited to introduce the all new Raspberry Pi Pico, a tiny, $4, MicroPython and C/C++ board with custom RP2040 silicon.

This is the first product from the Raspberry Pi Foundation built with their in house designed RP2040.

At $4 and available individually or even available on reels, this Raspberry Pi is the next step in home and industrial products.

Looking at the edge of the PCB you can see the Raspberry Pi Pico has been designed to be used with header pins or soldered directly onto your products PCB.

James Adams, Chief Operating Officer, Raspberry Pi Trading, said:

“This is the start of an exciting new era for Raspberry Pi. With Raspberry Pi Pico, and RP2040, we have been able to draw on insights drawn from a decade of using other vendors’ microcontrollers, and to create an innovative silicon platform for our customers. People have used Raspberry Pi to create a broader spread of projects and products than we could have imagined a decade ago; we’re sure the same will be true of Raspberry Pi Pico.”

image

Raspberry Pi Pico Specifications:

  • GPIO and Debug Pins
  • RP2040 Microcontroller
  • Two cores clocked at 133MHz
  • 256KB RAM
  • 2MB of On-board Flash Memory
  • Micro-USB B Port for Power, Data and Reprogramming of the Flash memory.

 

Raspberry Pi Pico Peripherals:

  • I2C x4
  • SPI x2
  • PWM x2
  • UART x2
  • Timer
  • RTC
  • ADC & TS

 

Raspberry Pi Pico Dimensions:

21mm (W) x 51.3mm (L) x 3.9mm (H)

 

Raspberry Pi Pico GPIO Pinout

image

 


The 40 pin 21x51 'DIP' style 1mm thick PCB with 0.1" through-hole pins also with edge castellations

  • Exposes 26 multi-function 3.3V General Purpose I/O (GPIO)
  • 23 GPIO are digital-only and 3 are ADC capable
  • Can be surface mounted as a module
  • 3-pin ARM Serial Wire Debug (SWD) port


First Product built on Raspberry Pi designed Silicon - Meet the RP2040

Raspberry Pi Pico is built around the brand-new Raspberry Pi RP2040 microcontroller, delivering a flexible, highly affordable development platform that can also be directly deployed into end products, reducing time-to-market. RP2040 offers high performance for integer workloads, a large on-chip memory, and a wide range of I/O options, making it a flexible solution for a wide range of microcontroller applications.
Professional design engineers who are already comfortable working with Raspberry Pi will easily adopt the Raspberry Pi Pico and appreciate its ease of use and affordability.

image

RP2040 Microcontroller.
RP2040 is a low-cost, high-performance microcontroller device with flexible digital interfaces. Key features:


• Dual Cortex M0+ processors, up to 133 MHz

• 264 kB of embedded SRAM in 6 banks

• 30 multifunction GPIO

• 6 dedicated IO for SPI Flash (supporting XIP)

• Dedicated hardware for commonly used peripherals

• Programmable IO for extended peripheral support

• 4 channel ADC with internal temperature sensor, 0.5 MSa/s, 12 bit conversion

• USB 1.1 Host/Device




Developer tools
Simple drag and drop programming via micro-USB. 3-pin Serial Wire Debug (SWD) for interactive debugging. Comprehensive C SDK, mature MicroPython port, and extensive examples and documentation.

image

Power
On-board power supply to generate 3.3V for RP2040 and external circuitry. Wide input voltage range, from 1.8V to 5.5V, giving designers the flexibility to select their preferred power source.


Raspberry Pi Pico Size and Layout:




image

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Top Comments

  • Fred27
    Fred27 over 5 years ago +12
    Certainly an interesting device, and I'm sure it will become very popular. I must say that personally I'm not a fan of MicroPython - or any interpreted embedded languages. I feel that the real strength…
  • Workshopshed
    Workshopshed over 5 years ago +11
    Looks to be a powerful little board in a nice form factor. I love the fact it has sensible mounting holes even if that does make the silkscreen for those pins a little hard to read. I'd be interested to…
  • Fred27
    Fred27 over 5 years ago +10
    It looks like other companies (the usual suspects) are making boards based on the RP2040 too. https://www.cnx-software.com/2021/01/21/third-party-raspberry-pi-rp2040-boards-from-arduino-adafruit-sparkfun…
  • jomoenginer
    jomoenginer over 5 years ago in reply to dougw

    In some areas the term 'Tart' has a negative meaning. 

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  • jomoenginer
    jomoenginer over 5 years ago

    There was a cool Arm Software Developers Innovation Coffee session today titled  'Edge of the outside world, an introduction' where they mentioned giving away Raspberry Pi Pico's on their Discord channel for those who let them know of an interesting project the Pico could be used in.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zWK53mJJ2U8&t=3782s

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  • dougw
    dougw over 5 years ago in reply to ntewinkel

    ntewinkel It is probably smart marketing to associate it with the Raspberry Pi name rather than try to build a new identity, although they might have achieved that by calling it a Raspberry Tart.

    It should make a good interface "co-processor" for a Pi 4 and reduce the need to marry arduinos to Raspberry Pi's.

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  • neilk
    neilk over 5 years ago in reply to ntewinkel

    ntewinkel  wrote:

     

    Also, was anyone else thrown by the fact that this "Raspberry Pi" is not a SBC - ie, very different than what we've come to think of as a Raspberry Pi?

     

    That's what I noticed almost immediately and that's what attracted me.

     

    Neil

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  • jomoenginer
    jomoenginer over 5 years ago in reply to jomoenginer

    Looks like Pete from TinyML fame has created a port of TensorFlow Lite Micro which will work with the Raspberry Pi Pico.

    https://github.com/raspberrypi/pico-tflmicro

     

    It would be interesting to see how far this can push the Dual-core Arm Cortex-M0+ on the Pico.

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  • ntewinkel
    ntewinkel over 5 years ago

    That's really interesting!

     

    Is the $4 price point a short-term introductory price, or is that what it will stay at?

     

    At that price it appears to be targeted to compete with the Espressif development boards.

    We were also just recently talking about MicroPython and CircuitPython and how they generally require higher cost boards, and as such not really suited to the ultra-affordable ESP8266 boards. This could change that.

     

    Like Douglas Wong mentioned above, I'm also curious to see how stable and mature the whole platform is.

     

    Also, was anyone else thrown by the fact that this "Raspberry Pi" is not a SBC - ie, very different than what we've come to think of as a Raspberry Pi?

     

    Best,

    -Nico

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  • jomoenginer
    jomoenginer over 5 years ago

    Wow!  I just got wind of this via the Adafruit stream.  This looks like a cool little piece of Pi which could be tossed in a nice projects which do not require a full on RasPi or similar board. 

     

    There appears to be a cool getting started site with some projects to get one going with the board:

    https://projects.raspberrypi.org/en/projects/getting-started-with-the-pico

     

    Also, you can get a free one with a subscription to HackSpace, but it seems like more of a UK thing:

    https://raspberrypipress.imbmsubscriptions.com/bar2021/

     

    I'm smelling a Project14 based on the Raspberry Pi Pico in the near future.

     

    Thanks for posting this.

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  • ajcc
    ajcc over 5 years ago in reply to dougw

    dougw  wrote:

     

    I don't see it for sale on Newark yet?

    I found a post from Embedded Computing Design that states:

    Newark customers will be able to purchase the Raspberry Pi Pico from the Newark website starting on Monday, January 25.

    So that could be why you're not finding it yet?

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  • dougw
    dougw over 5 years ago in reply to ajcc

    I expect I will be ordering a "Pipico".

    There is already no question I will be using them at some point.

    I don't see it for sale on Newark yet?

     

    Update:

    It is starting to appear....Pi PicoPi Pico

    https://canada.newark.com/raspberry-pi/raspberry-pi-pico/raspberry-pi-pico-rp2040-mcu-board/dp/22AJ1097?st=pico

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  • neilk
    neilk over 5 years ago in reply to ajcc

    ajcc Ahhhhhhhhhh thanks for that!! I'm no C/C++ expert image. My only experience is within the Arduino IDE.

     

    I assumed that cmake was similar to that.

     

    Neil

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