Intel Galileo

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Intel Galileo

Intel Galileo is an Arduino -certified physical computing platform from the American semiconductor manufacturer Intel , which was released on October 17, 2013. The Intel Galileo platform is programmable via the IDE of the Arduino platform . On June 16, 2017, Intel announced the discontinuation of production and sales of the Galileo platform as of December 16, 2017.

Technical details

processor Intel Quark SoC X1000 (32-bit)
Operating voltage Can be set to 3.3 V or 5 V using the IOREF jumper .
Flash memory 8 Mbytes
EEPROM 11 KiB
SRAM 512 KiB DDR3
Digital I / O pins 14th
... with PWM 6th
Analog inputs 6th
Interfaces USB host, USB client, SPI , ICSP , microSD , Ethernet , PCI Express Mini
Dimensions 106.7 mm x 71.1 mm

supporting documents

Compared to the Arduino platform

In contrast to the original Arduino boards, Intel Galileo has its own microprocessor of the Pentium series, which is said to be faster than the microcontrollers from the Atmel AVR series used by most Arduino boards . Even if the Intel Galileo is larger than, for example, the Arduino Mega (the largest of the Arduino boards), the GPIO pins have been placed in such a way that so-called Arduino shields can be used with the Intel Galileo. These shields are expansion boards for the Arduino platform, which expand the functions of the Arduino boards. In addition, the Intel Galileo is supplied with a Linux operating system.

Similar devices

See also

Web links

Commons : Intel Galileo  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ArduinoCertified on arduino.cc. Retrieved December 15, 2014
  2. Product Change Notification
  3. Article by Hackaday
  4. Data sheet of the Intel Galileo on intel.com. (English, PDF (0.7 MB)). Retrieved December 15, 2014
  5. Product presentation on arduino.cc (English). Retrieved December 15, 2014
  6. Product presentation on intel.de (English). Retrieved December 15, 2014
  7. Article on Intel Galileo on heise.de . Retrieved December 15, 2014