• IrateAnteater@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    Maybe it’s just what I’ve been noticing, but I feel like Arduino was already losing its share of the hobbyist market. The plethora of small, cheap esp32 devices have already been taking Arduino’s place.

    • 0x0@lemmy.zip
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      1 day ago

      Same with raspberrypi really.
      companies just can’t seem to know how to grow without line go up mentality.

        • AreaKode@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          In capitalism, the consumer isn’t the target audience. A business exists to make money. The more money you make, the more shareholders you gain, the more the shareholders demand BLOOD!

              • psud@aussie.zone
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                20 hours ago

                I think that only happens if you manage to acquire a monopoly and are forced to break up your company - I’m not entirely sure you have to sell parts of it publicly even then

                Unless the someone happens to be the owner.

              • mech@feddit.org
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                1 day ago

                ???
                You don’t need to take your company public, you know?
                You can just stay its sole owner, then no one can force you to do anything with it (except for a judge).

                  • mech@feddit.org
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                    1 day ago

                    Any country which has the concept of private property, and a relatively robust political and legal system.

                • zeca@lemmy.ml
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                  1 day ago

                  Depends on the laws. In certain situations, you may be forced to sell part/all of you company.

                  Besides the legal ways, someone may threaten you or something demanding that you sell it, its not impossible.

      • funkajunk@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        They seem to forget that “line go up” isn’t the primary objective. If you make a good product and give half a shit about your customers, the line goes up as a natural consequence.

      • theneverfox@pawb.social
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        1 day ago

        companies just can’t seem to know how to grow without line go up mentality.

        That’s like saying “people just can’t seem to harness the advantages of cancer without dying”

        If you never take money and get hooked by outside sources, you can just slowly grow, with no debt, beholden to no one

        If you take the money with any strings attached at all, you basically have to grow like cancer or your company will be sold for parts. It’s inevitable at that point

        Don’t take the money kids. If you have to take a business loan in the beginning - fine,

        • andioop@programming.dev
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          1 day ago

          was the comma a typo of a period, or did you have more to say here? if you have more to say i’m eager to listen

          • theneverfox@pawb.social
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            21 hours ago

            I meant to delete the comment to keep things simple, but what I was going to say is something like

            fine, but debt is like gambling. There’s situations where it makes sense, but it’s addictive. It’s mortgaging your own future, even when it maths out it’s a risk - shit happens

            And if you over leverage and under perform, it’s over. If you can pay yourself and your employees, you’re better off never taking on debt again.

            Like Wegmans. It’s the very best grocery store, everyone who goes there agrees. They grow slowly because they only open new locations when they have the cash to do so, and so they never have to compromise on quality in any way

      • SatyrSack@quokk.au
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        1 day ago

        Odd that the newer RP2350 has a lower clock speed, while being improved in most other respects. Is that why the RP2040 is still seemingly the community preference?

        Feature RP2040 RP2350
        Package QFN-56EP QFN-60EP or QFN-80EP
        CPU Cores 2 × ARM Cortex-M0+ 2 × ARM Cortex-M33 (w/FPU), 2 × Hazard3 RISC-V
        CPU Clock 200 MHz[5] 150 MHz
        SRAM 264 KB, 6 banks 520 KB, 10 banks
        Flash None None (RP2350), 2 MB (RP2354)
        OTP None 8 KB
        DMA 12 chan, 2 IRQ 16 chan, 4 IRQ
        PIO 2 (8 state machines) 3 (12 state machines)
        PWM 16 24
        ADC 4-chan 12-bit ADC 4-chan 12-bit (QFN-60EP), 8-chan 12-bit (QFN-80EP)
        DAC None None
        HSTX None One
        Engines ? RNG, SHA-256

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RP2350

        • thejml@sh.itjust.works
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          1 day ago

          Personally, I never really counted the RP2350 as a successor. It’s a different animal completely. A 2040 successor would be something like 4x cortex-m0’s or a faster clock with more ram or whatever, the 2350 has completed different capabilities and components and can live along side the 2040.

          I feel like the preferred one is the 2040 simply because it’s cheaper, and capable enough for the vast majority of use cases at this point.

          Edit: yes I know RPI called their board using the 2350 the pico 2, but the 2040 chip itself is used in more places than just the pico and not every one used the 2350 as a v2.

        • Tavi@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 day ago

          Cheap. Also, a large part of the tinkering community never moves past soldering or perf board + lack of cheap 2354 boards. 2040 is already good enough for keebs and most projects. 2350 had eratta E9 published (gpio lockup) which killed its initial adoption rate for more advanced projects PicoLogicAnalyzer, protocol emulation, etc.

        • andioop@programming.dev
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          1 day ago

          Hey thanks! I was wondering what my alternatives were. Bought RPis, having remembered that name from a decade ago, and then read the posts here about how those are getting worse. Glad to see something that could take their place for my next project :) This is the kind of stuff I come to programming.dev for.

    • mesa@piefed.social
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      1 day ago

      There are clones now more open than arduino that we can buy. In addition esp32 and other small boards are awesome.

    • vaionko@sopuli.xyz
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      1 day ago

      But how many of those esp32s are programmed using the Arduino IDE and Arduino libraries?

    • Valmond@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I love the ESP32, was onboard with the ESP-8266 (might have the numbers wrong, it was the predecessor), but I thought the real difference between the ESP-32 and the Rpi was that the Rpi has an OS with a possible desktop even (and all that Libux has to offer basically), as the ESP is more of a uProcessor you program in C/C++?

      Edit: Plesse disregard, I mixed up the posts and posted one levet too high too…

      • IrateAnteater@sh.itjust.works
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        1 day ago

        To answer your question anyway, raspberry Pi made the rp2040 chip, which is a microcontroller similar to the esp, instead of a full fat computer SOC