The Raspberry Pi Zero has some new competition. A Chinese company is running a crowdfunding campaign for a tiny computer-on-a-module called the Lichee Pi Zero that’s priced as low as $6. It has an ARM ...
They're mainly home user first computer sort of thing. At least that's how they market them in the UK. Keeping that in mind I wouldn't expect top notch hardware.<P>I would think Dell was a better bet.
The ESP32 family are the microcontrollers which just keep on giving, as new versions keep them up-to-date and plenty of hackers come up with new things for them. A popular device is a general purpose ...
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