SparkFun Electronics Commentsurn:uuid:214d0e4e-f1b1-d287-ce26-ac5b4c9f82492024-03-28T17:47:06-06:00SparkFun ElectronicsCustomer #1272652 on DEV-14134 - Arduino Industrial 101Customer #1272652urn:uuid:c6527ef0-8ee1-aa18-0999-e7ad300a83132018-03-18T21:43:28-06:00<p>Are you reviewing the "Arduino Industrial 101?" what did you think "industrial" meant.</p>
Customer #1272652 on DEV-14134 - Arduino Industrial 101Customer #1272652urn:uuid:46afd7a8-96c1-e8d6-ac80-657b3c6742ca2018-03-18T21:33:32-06:00<p>No. I had reservations about the Arduino 101 (A project of Intel as much as Arduino with a x86 Quark chip) Definitely don't mess with the "industrial version."
Yun has a linux System-on-a-chip microprocessor. It is a complete sub-microcomputer. (maybe they'll start calling them picocomputers?) Other Arduinos are based on microcontrollers. You cannot run linux on an Arduino Uno, for example. (nor would you want to). If you want to attempt projects like home video servers or video game emulation; projects that require very little knowledge of electronics, where you can solve more problems with software, I'd go with the Raspberry Pi. If you want to learn about circuits and sensors, and electronics in general, you want to go with Arduino. Both of them are good for learning programming, but RPi more for something like web scripting, or interfacing with PC and small networks. Arduino is for programming appliances, robots, etc. The Holy Grail is combining the two in the Internet of Things, and Arduino 101 is an example of one failure to do that Yun (and imitations) is also a combo attempt, I'd say if you were already invested in Arduino, and were familiar with Arduino "Hats," Yun would be the way to go, and quite reasonably priced as far as what it is capable of doing.</p>
Customer #631719 on DEV-14134 - Arduino Industrial 101Customer #631719urn:uuid:c618fbdb-df16-8313-5c06-2a7e554a8df42017-12-10T10:44:38-07:00<p>hello there. how do u think, is it suitable for a novice? don't wanna buy a lot of boards — wanna buy a decent one instead, with an IoT potential underhood. Yun seems a bit overpriced to me. will I be able to complete some basic projects with it, no prior experience? Is it shield-compatible?</p>
l0gikG8 on DEV-14134 - Arduino Industrial 101l0gikG8urn:uuid:3c113249-4537-89a0-0352-9d656eb9da922017-08-23T21:09:07-06:00<p>There is change in the air (hopefully for the better)<p><a href="https://blog.arduino.cc/2017/07/28/a-new-era-for-arduino-begins-today/" rel="nofollow">https://blog.arduino.cc/2017/07/28/a-new-era-for-arduino-begins-today/</a></p></p>
zsc100 on DEV-14134 - Arduino Industrial 101zsc100urn:uuid:fb925cb5-5f29-9f82-9248-0e5f65a142662017-08-23T18:16:49-06:00<p>The documentation on this product is horrible. I can't believe this from Arduino.</p>
William Kalfelz on DEV-14134 - Arduino Industrial 101William Kalfelzurn:uuid:42d3c54d-0c8d-b0e9-5524-dce9553c13452017-04-28T10:07:52-06:00<p>Can I run bare metal code on the big processor?</p>