










🚀 Tiny Tech, Massive Impact — Power Your Innovation Anywhere!
The Seeeduino XIAO is the smallest Arduino-compatible microcontroller board featuring a 48MHz ARM Cortex-M0+ CPU, 256KB flash memory, and 32KB SRAM. Despite its thumb-sized form factor, it offers 14 GPIO pins with analog and digital channels, plus UART, I2C, SPI, and USB Type-C interfaces. Fully compatible with Arduino IDE, it’s ideal for rapid prototyping, wearable devices, and compact DIY projects demanding speed, versatility, and low power.







| ASIN | B08GJT33MD |
| Best Sellers Rank | 174,462 in Business, Industry & Science ( See Top 100 in Business, Industry & Science ) 613 in Microcontrollers |
| Customer reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (694) |
| Date First Available | 15 July 2020 |
| Manufacturer | seeed studio |
R**S
I bought 3 of these a couple years ago to play around with. At the time, it was just because they were cheap and quick to get on Amazon. I quickly fell in love. Though they aren't perfect. Pros: Size. They're tiny. Even 2 years on, most microcontrollers are *at least* 2 to 4 times the size. The small size makes them easy to fit into almost any project. They're literally the size of a postage stamp. I can cover one with my finger. Which brings me to the next pro: I/O. Even at this tiny size, you still have tons of I/O, with support for hardware interrupts, UART, I2C, SPI, and true analog pins with DAC. The big one for me, though, is HID support through the USB type C port. That's a much less common feature than you'd think. If you want to make devices that can talk to other devices as an input device, you need this. Speed. You don't really think that a simple Arduino device needs to be fast, but having a 48mhz processor and 32mb of SRAM to work with open up a LOT of possibilities. Take, for example, my most recent project. I wanted to make a vintage laptop keyboard work with a modern laptop motherboard. But I wanted to do so without damaging the original keyboard. So to interface the two, I needed the Xiao to be able to read the PS/2 protocol that the keyboard was talking in, and give USB HID protocol commands to the computer. Reading the PS/2 protocol takes very precise timing. Your code has to execute within a certain number of microseconds, otherwise the command will fail. Because of the speed of the processor, I could have more code executing in the interrupts while still staying under the threshold. Cons: Storage. While I've never run up against the limit, the Xiao has 256 kB of flash memory. That's not the smallest, but it's certainly not the biggest I've seen on a microcontroller. So I do get a little nervous when I start importing a bunch of libraries. So far, my most involved project, the keyboard that I talked about earlier, only uses about 25% of that storage. And that's importing two different libraries plus my custom code. But if you have a large project that takes many libraries or a whole lot of code, you might run into problems with storage. Bootloader Corruption. I've only had it happen once and it was after hundreds upon hundreds of code uploads. These guys saying they're bricking after 50 uploads have to be doing something wrong. Or maybe it's because they're on Mac hardware, I don't know. But I've had to upload 50 times pretty much everyday I've worked on this project and so far it's not been a problem. But like I said, I did have one of my original three stop responding to USB. So the problem does exist. The device itself still does what the last upload of code told it to do, but I can no longer get it to talk with the Arduino software. And resetting the unit didn't resolve it. So you're mileage may vary.
N**N
Very satisfied with the purchase, all 3 SAMD21 board tested and confirmed working. I will be able to prototype easily with these spare boards
S**N
Super petit très content : ) !
海**神
商品説明の写真にははんだ付けされたピンが付いているが 届いた物にはピンが付いていなかった。付属すらしていない。 返品するにも時間がもったいないからピンは自分で付ける。 SeeeduinoXIAOは悪くないけどSHOPがダメ。
L**Q
The Xiao was easy to setup in my Arduino IDE. Once I installed the correct "Board" in "Board Managers", I was able to upload code to the chip. Worked great.... for a day. Then the board stopped responding to USB. I'm not sure if it was a bad batch or what happened. It was promptly replaced with a new one. So far so good. I will update a review in the replaced purchase item listing. These boards are a great way to implement controllers, into a tiny project case. UPDATE: The new board works great. Have had no problems. I would highly recommend this board to anyone that needs a microcontroller that fits into a small project enclosure. I will be buying more, for future projects.
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