NXP's new LPC800-MAX board available for 1 Euro
Information
NXP have informed me that due to overwhelming response, all the vouchers have now been redeemed.
The board is now available for purchase directly from Embedded Artists or from your local NXP authorized distributor. If you did receive a voucher but have not used it yet, note that it is only valid until 30th of October 2013!
NXP have announced the availability of the mbed enabled NXP LPC800-MAX board, along with a promotion to make the hardware available for just 1 Euro.
The LPC800-MAX is based on NXPs LPC812, a Cortex-M0+ that is aimed at 8/16 applications where additional functionality and performance is required. The board is primarily an Arduino compatible form factor, but as the LPC812 has a full crossbar for IO routing it can also support the standard pinouts for LPCXpresso and the mbed DIP form factor.
Visit NXPs LPC800-MAX promotional site for more details on the offer :
To enable as many projects as possible, the LPC800-MAX board includes additional analog (A/D and D/A) and digital GPIO provided by I2C devices. These parts are likely to find their way into many designs based on the LPC800-MAX reference design, and so we want to encourage a good quality Component Database entry for each.
The Component Database is a feature we introduced recently to host reusable libraries for different hardware, middleware and IoT services that you can use with ARM Microcontrollers. These components can be used as building blocks for quickly developing prototypes and products.
Components and the associated libraries, examples and documentation are created and added to the database by mbed developers, component manufacturers and service providers. The goal is to create a canonical database of rock-solid code and resources for every useful component that can be used with ARM microcontrollers.
As an incentive to get these I2C parts into the Component Database, NXP have provided a few boards that we can give away in exchange for making the entry. If you would like to make the entry for one of these parts, please email support@mbed.org providing :
- Name
- mbed User name
- Full postal address
- Contact phone number (needed by Fed Ex)
We're looking forward to seeing what the mbed community does with the LPC800-MAX - feel free to post to the forum to show everyone what you've been doing!
8 comments on NXP's new LPC800-MAX board available for 1 Euro:
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Olimex, maker of development boards and tools, does not like the new LPC800-MAX board it seems. The article is factually incorrect in claiming that the mbed compiler is closed source. Otherwise, I think the criticism is a bit harsh and seeks to promote their own agenda. What do others think? http://olimex.wordpress.com/2013/09/10/what-happens-when-the-engineers-listen-to-the-marketing-managers-or-why-arduino-cant-be-killed-by-all-these-new-arduino-killer-boards/