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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 5/26/2014 12:34 AM, Michael Schnell
wrote:<br>
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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 05/23/2014 07:39 PM, Daniel
Sapundjiev wrote:<br>
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<p class="MsoNormal"><font face="Tahoma" size="3"><span
style="font-size: 12.0pt;font-family:Tahoma"
lang="EN-US">Can someone help me with the 8 bit </span></font><font
face="Tahoma"><span style="font-family:Tahoma"
lang="EN-US">AVR</span></font><font face="Tahoma"><span
style="font-family:Tahoma" lang="EN-US">.</span></font></p>
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<font size="3"><font face="Tahoma">Do you really plan to sell a
device in such great <font size="3">quantities that it makes
sens</font></font></font>e do invest a lot of software
engineering effort in an 8 Bit arch instead of one of the (better)
supported 32 Bit archs, just to save some cent per piece ? </blockquote>
The fact is that the 8bit AVR (Atmel) chips are well supported and
more than just "some cent per piece" cheaper, and they work with a
wider voltage range then any 32bit chip out there (without expensive
circuitry to get the same voltage "agnostic"). They are the base, in
form of the ATmega328(P) and ATmega32u4 MCUs, for the most common
Arduino boards and their derivatives, the Arduino Uno and Arduino
Leonardo. Very common, and very cheap... <span
class="moz-smiley-s3"><span> ;-) </span></span><br>
<br>
Ralf<br>
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