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Based on our record, PlatformIO should be more popular than Arduboy. It has been mentiond 55 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I have ported the Arduboy library over to the sci-calc! (visit arduboy.com to learn more about arduboy). Most of the work was done by tonym128 (https://github.com/tonym128/ESP32_Arduboy), I just tweaked a few places to make it work for the sci-calc. The games are loaded on the MicroSD card, like all the other external programs for the sci-calc. Porting games is relatively easy (Documentation coming soon!). Source: about 1 year ago
There are also various open-source physical consoles (e.g. Arduboy, Pokitto, Gamebuino), each with its own unique character that spawns its very own culture of independent, free, non-commercial game creation. Source: over 1 year ago
Well, this has been done a few times before. Arduboy is likely the most prominent existing handheld in this category. Its basic and original version costs $49, is currently available in that and an upgraded version, and is a true 8-bit handheld. Source: over 2 years ago
Get a cheap https://arduboy.com/ (which has a crank mod) and support a better homebrew scene. Source: almost 3 years ago
I'm just confused why it is so much more expensive than the arduboy (https://arduboy.com/) or anything coming out of ambernic(https://www.anbernic.com/). Ambernic especially seems to be as good or better build quality, chip speed, etc., and cheaper for what it is! arduboy has such a great community behind it and anbernic devices run pico-8, another great gaming development community. I want to get the playdate... Source: almost 3 years ago
For the ESP32 in read mode, we've successfully developed a project using PlatformIO that accepts the key during build time and stores it in memory. Source: 8 months ago
Check out Zephyr OS and Platform IO. Zephyr is part of the Linux foundation and has similarities to Linux with how it performs hardware abstraction (device tree). Platform IO integrates with other frameworks including mbed and Arduino. Source: 9 months ago
PlatformIO together with avr-stub can be used to do source level debugging but there are some caveats. Source: 12 months ago
Look into https://platformio.org/, it can abstract over a few RTOSes, and can show you which OSes work with which chips/boards. Source: 12 months ago
If the HW looks like it works, you could also try alternate programming software. (e.g. TinyGo or PlatformIO). Source: about 1 year ago
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