News

Texas Instruments has launched the Stellaris LaunchPad evaluation kit for ARM Cortex-M4 developers. The tool lets engineers explore ARM Cortex-M4F microcontrollers and TI's Stellaris family of mcus.
Posted in ARM, Hackaday Columns Tagged arm, ARM Cortex-M4, Cortex M4F, M4F, msp430 ← Resource Monitoring Solution ...
What is the approach of Texas Instruments to microcontroller design? Jennifer Barry, the supplier’s product marketing engineer for microcontrollers explains how it positions its ARM and MSP430 MCU ...
Texas Instruments has introduced an ARM Cortex-M4F version of its MSP430 microcontroller family, taking it from 16 to 32bits, with no extra power draw. “The integrated DSP engine and floating-point ...
The small gate count Cortex-M0 has been added to offload many of the control and I/O handling duties that drain the bandwidth of the Cortex-M4 core. Both cores are capable of running at 204MHz. Gordon ...
The Renesas family of 16-bit micros is competitive with the MSP430 in pricing but does not beat the MSP in power consumption. However, the new ARM Cortex offering from ST Microelectronics, is the ...
“The Cortex-M4 and Cortex-M0, in combination with our leading-edge embedded Flash and ultra-low-power technologies, will join the Cortex-M3 core MCUs to allow ST to significantly expand its STM32 ...
Moreover, there’s 264kB of SRAM. A Cortex-M0 subsystem processor offloads many of the data-movement and I/O-handling duties that can drain the bandwidth of the Cortex-M4 core.