For $30, Intel’s Arduino 101 board provides an easy path for makers to build a wearable computer, a mini-robot or a smart appliance for the home. The tiny board, which went on sale this week, fits in ...
This week, Intel and Arduino are releasing their first product pushed directly on the education market, the Arduino/Genuino 101 board powered by the Intel Curie module. The Arduino/Genuino 101 is the ...
Two years after launching the Curie-powered Arduino 101 maker board, Intel is calling it quits on the hardware. The chipmaker has announced the end-of-life for its Curie Module, which launched in 2015 ...
Spring cleaning or killing spree, you decide. Intel has been rather aggressively "retiring" some of its less profitable endeavors, most of them revolving around the Internet of Things and wearable ...
Intel and Arduino have unveiled a new development board this week in the form of the Arduino 101 as it will be named in the US or the Genuino 101 throughout Europe. That has been equipped with Intel’s ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. Intel’s tiny Curie chip, introduced earlier this year as a ...
It might not be cute as a button, but Intel’s button-sized Curie Compute Module (just a fancy name for a new SoC) promises to greatly advance the low-power wearables market. The chip giant first ...
Serving tech enthusiasts for over 25 years. TechSpot means tech analysis and advice you can trust. Intel unveiled its button-sized Curie module at CES this past January and now nine months later, the ...
The Arduino 101 board will be the first product to use Intel's Curie module The first product to use Intel's tiny Curie chip will be a development board called Arduino 101, reports PC World. The Curie ...
Intel has launched the Genuino 101 maker board, which will be known as the Arduino 101 inside the USA. This is the first widely available development board based on the tiny, low-power Intel Curie ...
This year at CES, Intel introduced Curie — a button-sized system-on-chip module made for low-power wearables — but the company was mum on what would be the first products to use it. Now we know. Intel ...
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