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Headers Strip 14 ways Arduino MKR1000 Printed

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SKU C000118 Barcode 7630049201200 Show more
Original price €0
Original price €1,40 - Original price €1,40
Original price
Current price €1,40
€1,40 - €1,40
Current price €1,40
VAT included
14 pin Female/Male header strips MKR1000 printed, very useful for board extensions.

Overview

14 pin Female/Male header strips MKR1000 printed, very useful for board extensions.

We use them extensively on Proto Shield PCB, but they are useful in any shield because of their height.

Features:

Receptacle Style: Square

Number of Ways/Pins: 14

Pin Spacing: 2.54 mm

Component Height: 20.7mm (Plastic body 8.5mm - pins 12.2 mm)


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Your Arduino Nano ESP32 can run Doom
Your Arduino Nano ESP32 can run Doom
September 12, 2023

"But can it run Doom?" is more than just a joke in the tech world. It is also a decent litmus test for the computing power of hardware. That test isn't very relevant for modern computers, but it is still worth asking when discussing microcontrollers. Microcontrollers vary in dramatically in processing power and memory, with models to suit every application. But if you have an Arduino Nano ESP32 board, you can run Doom as Naveen Kumar has proven. The Nano ESP32 is a small IoT development board for the ESP32-S3 microcontroller, featuring Wi-Fi® and Bluetooth® connectivity. It also has a relatively high clock speed and quite a lot of memory: 240MHz and 512kB SRAM, respectively. That still isn't enough to meet the requirements of the original Doom release, which needed a lot more RAM. But Kumar demonstrates the use of an MCU-friendly port that runs well on this more limited hardware. Want to give it a try yourself? You'll need the Nano ESP32, an Adafruit 2.8" TFT LCD shield, an M5Stack joystick, a Seeed Studio Grove dual button module, a breadboard, and some jumper wires to create a simple handheld console. You'll have to compile and flash the Retro-Go firmware, which was designed specifically for running games like Doom on ESP32-based devices. You can then load the specialized WAD (Where's All the Data) files. Kumar reports an average frame rate at a 320×240 resolution, which is very playable.

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