Adafruit
Adafruit ItsyBitsy M4 Express featuring ATSAMD51
The Adafruit ItsyBitsy M4 Express is a high-performance microcontroller board powered by the ATSAMD51 Cortex M4 running at 120 MHz with hardware floating poi...
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The Adafruit ItsyBitsy M4 Express is a high-performance microcontroller board powered by the ATSAMD51 Cortex M4 running at 120 MHz with hardware floating point and DSP support. Packed into a tiny 1.4" × 0.7" form factor, it delivers 512 KB Flash, 192 KB RAM, and 2 MB of SPI Flash for CircuitPython code and file storage.
Ships with CircuitPython pre-loaded — plug it in, edit the Python code on the drive that appears, and your project runs immediately. Also fully compatible with the Arduino IDE. The UF2 bootloader makes flashing as simple as dragging a file to a USB drive.
Key Features
- ATSAMD51 Cortex M4 – 120 MHz, 32-bit with hardware floating point and DSP
- 512 KB Flash, 192 KB RAM – Plenty of room for complex projects
- 2 MB SPI Flash – Onboard storage for CircuitPython code, data logging, and files
- CircuitPython & Arduino – Ships with CircuitPython; also programmable via Arduino IDE
- Native USB – Serial console, HID keyboard/mouse, MIDI, or disk drive
- 23 GPIO Pins – 7× analogue inputs (12-bit), 2× 12-bit DAC outputs (1 MSPS), 18× PWM
- Dual 12-bit DAC – Play 12-bit stereo audio clips from A0 and A1
- VHigh Output & Level-Shifted Pin 5 – 5V logic output for NeoPixels, servos, and LEDs
- DMA NeoPixel Support – Drive 60,000+ pixels without processor overhead
- Built-in Crypto – AES-256, true RNG, and public key controller
- UF2 Bootloader – Drag-and-drop firmware flashing via USB
- Built-in RGB DotStar LED – Plus red Pin 13 LED
Ideal For
- High-performance CircuitPython and Arduino projects in a compact form
- Audio projects with dual 12-bit DAC outputs
- Large NeoPixel/DotStar LED installations with DMA support
- Shrinking Metro M4 or Feather M4 prototypes into final builds
Package Contents
- 1× Adafruit ItsyBitsy M4 Express (with CircuitPython pre-loaded)
- 1× Header Strip (unsoldered)
Resources
Jargon buster
Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.
- Bootloader
- Small starter software on a microcontroller that lets new code be uploaded before the main program runs. Knowing how to enter bootloader mode matters when you need to program the board or recover it after a faulty sketch.
- CircuitPython
- A beginner-friendly version of Python designed to run directly on microcontroller boards. If a product supports CircuitPython, you can often program it by copying code files onto the board rather than setting up a more complex toolchain.
- DAC
- A digital-to-analogue converter turns numbers from the microcontroller into a real analogue voltage. It matters if you want to generate simple waveforms, audio-style signals, or variable control voltages rather than just on/off outputs.
- DSP
- Digital signal processing means using software or hardware to analyse or modify signals such as audio, vibration, or sensor readings. A board suited to DSP is useful when a project needs fast maths for filtering, synthesis, or real-time signal analysis.
- GPIO
- General-purpose input/output pins are microcontroller pins you can set in software to read signals, switch devices on and off, or connect to peripherals. The number of GPIO pins matters because it limits how many buttons, LEDs, sensors, and other parts you can wire directly to the board.
- HID
- Human Interface Device is a USB device class used for keyboards, mice, gamepads and similar controls. If a board supports HID over USB, it can act like an input device to a computer without needing a custom driver.
- IDE
- Short for Integrated Development Environment, a program used to write, run and manage code. It matters because some learners prefer a traditional coding workspace instead of a guided notebook-style lesson.
- LED
- A light-emitting diode (LED) is a small electronic component that emits light when current flows through it in the correct direction. Because it only conducts one way, its polarity matters, and a through-hole LED must be soldered the correct way around to light up.
- microcontroller
- A microcontroller is a small computer on a single chip that runs a stored program and controls connected inputs and outputs such as buttons, sensors, displays and communication interfaces. In a device built around one, it is the part that executes the code and coordinates the device's behaviour.
- MIDI
- MIDI is a standard way for electronic instruments, controllers, and software to send musical control messages such as notes, velocity, and timing. If a board supports MIDI, it can be triggered from keyboards, drum pads, sequencers, or other music gear rather than only from buttons or code.
- native USB
- Native USB means the microcontroller itself handles USB communication, rather than using a separate USB-to-serial chip. This matters for programming, debugging, and projects that need the board to act directly as a USB device.
- NeoPixel
- A type of addressable LED system where colour data is sent along a single digital data line from one LED or controller to the next. Compatibility matters because the timing and signal format must match for the lights or driver board to respond correctly.
- PWM
- Pulse Width Modulation is a way for a digital pin to simulate variable output power by switching on and off very quickly. It matters for controlling things like LED brightness, motor speed, or servo-style signals from a microcontroller pin.
- RAM
- RAM (random-access memory) is fast, temporary memory a device uses for working data while it is running; in its common volatile form, its contents are lost when power is removed. Some devices offer a mode that applies settings to RAM only, which is handy for testing changes temporarily because they are not stored permanently and disappear at power-off.
- RGB
- Short for red, green and blue, the three primary colours of light that are mixed in varying amounts to make a wide range of colours. In electronics RGB can refer to an LED or pixel that blends these three colours, or to a colour signal or interface that carries separate red, green and blue channels.
- SPI
- A fast serial communication bus often used for displays, memory cards, and sensors. It matters because SPI devices need specific pins for clock and data, plus a separate chip-select line for each device.
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