The Arduino 101 will go on sale in the first quarter for $30 School kids and hardware enthusiasts who want to start tinkering with Intel’s tiny Curie chip will be able to get their hands on it early next year in the form of an Arduino development board. Curie is a new chip module that Intel showed at the International CES in January. About a centimeter across, it includes a 32-bit microcontroller, Bluetooth Low Energy for connectivity, a small amount of RAM and Flash, and a six-axis sensor with a gyrometer and accelerometer. Intel Intel’s Curie SOC for wearables The chip is built for wearable devices like a smart pendant or smart bracelet, but it could go into just about any small gadget that doesn’t need a lot of local processing power, such as a remote-controlled car. Arduino’s Curie board will be marketed as Arduino 101 in the U.S. and as Genuino 101 overseas, in line with how Arduino brands its other products. It will be priced at US$30, or about 27 euros, and go on sale in the first quarter next year. The board isn’t really small enough to build a decent wearable — it’s 7cm long and 5.5cm wide — but it’s OK for prototypes and getting familiar with Curie’s capabilities. Intel or its partners are expected to offer smaller Curie boards in the future. Intel Specs for the Arduino 101/Genuino 101 The board is aimed partly at schools, where it can be used in the classroom to get kids interested in programming and electronics. But it’s also aimed at the maker community, which has been using Arduino boards to build all kinds of products. Intel has been courting the maker community hard. It’s announcing Arduino 101 at the Maker Faire in Rome on Friday, where Intel is a sponsor, and the board will be featured on an upcoming reality TV show, “America’s Greatest Makers.” Having missed out on the smartphone market, and with PC sales in decline, Intel wants to make sure it doesn’t miss the next wave in computing, which might turn out to be be wearables. It hopes the maker community will produce a hit product based on one of its chips. Intel Intel’s line-up of Arduino boards It already offers a couple of Arduino boards, Edison and Galileo, but they’re more expensive and require more skill to program because they run the Linux OS. Arduino 101 is physically smaller and less than half the price, and it runs a small real-time operating system that makes it more suitable for young students to work with, said Jay Melican, whose title at Intel is “maker czar.” He said Arduino 101 is comparable to the Arduino Uno, which is based on a microcontroller from Atmel, except the Curie board includes Bluetooth and the six-axis sensor. Arduino’s founders have started a program for schools called Creative Technologies in the Classroom, which provides kits that include hardware and teaching materials for use in the classroom. Arduino 101 will be included in those kits, Melican said, helping Intel get its technology in the hands of budding engineers at a young age. “If you compare it to other entry-level boards at that price point, the big thing it brings is connectivity,” he said. “Young folks who are building things are used to interacting with robots and cars through their cell phone, and this lets them do that.” Like other Arduino boards, it can be programmed and charged up by plugging it into a PC via the USB port. It can be programmed using the Arduino developer tools. Intel also plans to send Curie developer boards to its device manufacturing partners, but it’s not talking about those yet. And it’s developing some software kits, called Intel IQ, specifically for wearable devices, but they’re not available yet either. If it wants to catch the next wave of computing, it had better get a move on. Related content analysis Beyond the usual suspects: 5 fresh data science tools to try today The mid-month report includes quick tips for easier Python installation, a new VS Code-like IDE just for Python and R users, and five newer data science tools you won't want to miss. By Serdar Yegulalp Jul 12, 2024 2 mins Python Programming Languages Software Development analysis Generative AI won’t fix cloud migration You’ve probably heard how generative AI will solve all cloud migration problems. It’s not that simple. Generative AI could actually make it harder and more costly. By David Linthicum Jul 12, 2024 5 mins Generative AI Artificial Intelligence Cloud Computing news HR professionals trust AI recommendations HireVue survey finds 73% of HR professionals trust AI to make candidate recommendations, while 75% of workers are opposed to AI making hiring decisions. By Paul Krill Jul 11, 2024 3 mins Technology Industry Careers how-to Safety off: Programming in Rust with `unsafe` What does it mean to write unsafe code in Rust, and what can you do (and not do) with the 'unsafe' keyword? The facts may surprise you. By Serdar Yegulalp Jul 11, 2024 8 mins Rust Programming Languages Software Development Resources Videos