SiFive announced the Arduino Cinque, the new RISC-V based development board | Open Electronics

https://www.open-electronics.org/sifive-announced-the-arduino-cinque-the-new-risc-v-based-development-board/

The Arduino Cinque is the second RISC-V based development board put out by SiFive (the first being the HiFive1) compatible with the Arduino platform. “By partnering with a pioneer in open-source hardware, SiFive can further advance the progress of open custom silicon”

Board has SiFive’s Freedom E310 customizable SoC, which runs off the E31 CPU Coreplex (32-bit RV32IMAC Core): the Freedom E310 claims to be the fastest microcontroller on the market, capable of running at 320 MHz.

The Arduino Cinque will also have built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth capabilities with the inclusion of an efficient, low-power Espressif ESP32 Wi-Fi/Bluetooth hybrid chip.

SiFive Unveils the first RISC-V-based Arduino Board at Maker Faire Bay Area

https://www.sifive.com/posts/2017/05/19/sifive-unveils-the-first-risc-v-based-arduino-board-at-maker-faire-bay-area/

The Arduino Cinque enables the Arduino ecosystem with a true open-source SoC, the next step in bringing true open-source silicon to the masses

4 Comments

  1. Tomi Engdahl says:

    A Smaller, Cheaper RISC V Board
    https://hackaday.com/2017/09/18/a-smaller-cheaper-risc-v-board/

    Early this year, the world of electronics saw something amazing. The RISC-V, the first Open Source microcontroller was implemented in silicon, and we got an Arduino-derived dev board in the form of the HiFive 1. The HiFive 1 is just a bit shy of mindblowing; it’s a very fast microcontroller that’s right up there with the Teensy when it comes to processing power. There’s support for the Arduino IDE, so all those fancy libraries are ready to go. That’s not to say there aren’t a few problems; it’s a relatively expensive board, and it does use the ubiquitous but somewhat unfortunate Arduino form factor.

    . Meet the LoFive RISC-V. It’s a GroupGets crowdfunding campaign from [Michael Welling], and it takes all the openness from the HiFive 1 and the FE310 microcontroller and stuffs it into a cheap, easy-to-use board.

    LoFive RISC-V
    https://groupgets.com/campaigns/353-lofive-risc-v

    Reply
  2. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Matthew Lynley / TechCrunch:
    SiFive, which helps companies ship custom chip designs based on the RISC-V architecture, raises $50.6M in venture financing led by Spark Capital and others

    SiFive gets $50.6M to help companies get their custom chip designs out the door
    https://techcrunch.com/2018/04/02/sifive-gets-50-6m-to-help-companies-get-their-custom-chip-designs-out-the-door/

    Reply
  3. Tomi Engdahl says:

    SiFive Launches Learn Inventor RISC-V Development Platform
    https://www.hackster.io/news/sifive-launches-learn-inventor-risc-v-development-platform-0472f3d2218a

    The SiFive Learn Inventor is a wireless RISC-V-based development kit inspired by the micro:bit.

    Reply

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