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Waveshare

· MPN: 30557

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Unleash the full potential of your next embedded project with the RP2350 1.47inch Display Development Board – a versatile and powerful platform that combines...

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Unleash the full potential of your next embedded project with the RP2350 1.47inch Display Development Board – a versatile and powerful platform that combines the efficiency of the RP2350 microcontroller with rich multimedia features. This development board is the perfect tool for hobbyists, educators, and professional developers alike, designed to streamline the process from prototype to production.
Key Features - Dynamic Dual-Core Power: At the heart of the board lies the RP2350 microcontroller with its pioneering dual architecture, featuring both dual-core Arm Cortex-M33 and dual-core Hazard3 RISC-V processors. This unique setup enables operation at a swift 150 MHz, providing the flexibility to leverage industry-standard cores or delve into the open-hardware RISC-V ecosystem.
  • Vivid Visuals: The onboard 1.47inch LCD display brings your creations to life with a 172×320 resolution and a palette of 262K colors, ensuring crisp, vibrant images for user interfaces or graphic outputs.
  • Generous Memory: With 520KB SRAM and 16MB of onboard Flash memory, this development board has ample space for complex applications and data storage.
  • Connectivity and Expansion: Featuring both Type-C and Type-A USB port options, plus a TF card slot for additional storage, the board supports USB 1.1 with host and device capabilities, ensuring seamless program burning and peripheral connectivity.
  • Effortless Programming: The Type-C USB port (for the Type-C version) ensures convenient and modern connectivity, while drag-and-drop programming via USB mass storage simplifies the development experience.
  • Intuitive Design: The development board includes a color-changing RGB LED with a clear acrylic sandwich panel, offering not just convenient status indication but also the potential for creating eye-catching lighting effects.
  • Robust Ancillaries: A precise onboard clock, a temperature sensor, and power management features, including low-power sleep and dormant modes, offer reliability and aid in low-energy applications.
Applications: The RP2350 1.47inch Display Development Board is suitable for a broad range of scenarios, including IoT projects, wearable technology, educational platforms, hobbyist maker projects, and industrial control systems.
What's On Board: Outlined also are the specifics like the W25Q128JVSIQ 16MB NOR-Flash, RT9193-33PB 300mA LDO regulator, RST and BOOT buttons, USB connectors, and a detailed interface definition, ensuring that you're equipped with everything you need to jumpstart your development.
Resources & Services: To support your development journey, Waveshare provides extensive documentation and a devoted wiki that includes resources and technical support to make integrating this development board into your next project a breeze.
Whether you're just starting or looking to upgrade your embedded system's capabilities, the RP2350 1.47inch Display Development Board from Waveshare is your ticket to a world of innovation and creativity.

Jargon buster

Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.

Arm Cortex-M33
A 32-bit, low-power Arm microcontroller core designed for real-time, timing-sensitive control tasks such as reading sensors or driving motors. It can act as a chip's main controller, or in some systems-on-chip run alongside larger application cores that handle an operating system like Linux.
Flash memory
Flash memory is non-volatile memory that retains stored data even when power is removed, and can be erased and rewritten in blocks. It lets data such as firmware, settings or saved records persist across power cycles.
IoT
Short for Internet of Things, meaning physical devices that connect to networks or the internet to send data or be controlled remotely. It matters if you want projects such as connected sensors, remote controls or classroom data-logging activities.
LCD
LCD stands for liquid crystal display, a screen technology that uses a backlight and liquid crystals to show images or text. It matters because LCD modules usually need a display driver and enough controller pins or a bus interface to send image data.
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.
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.
RISC-V
RISC-V is an open, royalty-free processor instruction-set architecture used in chips ranging from tiny microcontrollers to Linux-capable application processors. The choice of RISC-V determines which compilers, software tools, and performance or low-power features are available, separate from the more common Arm or x86 architectures.
RP2350
A microcontroller chip from Raspberry Pi used as the main processor on some development boards. Knowing the board is built around an RP2350 helps you check software support, pin capabilities and whether it suits MicroPython projects.
RST
RST (reset) is a control pin used to restart or reinitialise a device to a known state. Connecting an RST pin to a microcontroller lets the host reset the device, which can help with reliable start-up or recovery.
SRAM
Fast temporary memory used by a processor while a program is running. More SRAM helps with projects that handle larger data buffers, networking, displays, or more complex code.
Type-C
USB Type-C (USB-C) is a small, reversible USB connector used for charging, power, and data transfer on many modern devices. A Type-C port or plug indicates the cable and charger connection needed to power, charge, or communicate with a device.
USB 1.1
USB 1.1 is an older USB standard with much slower data transfer than USB 2.0 and later versions. Compatibility with it allows connection to very old computers, though data-heavy tasks such as video may be limited at that speed.
USB mass storage
USB mass storage is the standard USB device class used by many flash drives and external storage devices. If a board supports it, your project may be able to read and write files on compatible USB storage, provided the software library also supports the device.

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