Raspberry Pi has announced the Pico 2, a new generation of the Pico board featuring a new self-developed RP2350 microcontroller. This chip features more powerful ARM cores, higher clock speeds, and twice the memory than the previous microcontroller.
RP2350 controller It has, among other things: Two 150MHz Cortex-M33 cores and 520KB of SRAM. Raspberry Pi says it has also paid extra attention to improving security with this microcontroller and talks about, among other things, Site introduction-Support and Sha-256-accelerationThe Pi Pico has another RP2040 microcontroller with two 133MHz Cortex-M0+ cores. In addition to the Arm cores, the RP2350 also has two Hazard3-RISC-V cores, although the Pico 2 cannot use them simultaneously with the Cortex cores. The user must choose which cores to use at boot time.
The Pico 2 has 4MB of qspi flash memory, 2MB more than the first Pico. The new board has the same markup. Form factor Like the first Pico. Raspberry Pi says it doesn’t currently have a large stock of the Pico 2, though the board is “in full production” at Sony. Raspberry Pi says it will ship the Pico 2 to online retailers in the coming weeks, who will then ship the board to consumers. The Pico 2 maker expects to launch a Wi-Fi-enabled Pico 2 W before the end of the year, which will feature the same Infineon 43439 modem as the first Pico W.
The RP2350 microcontroller can also be purchased without the Pico 2 and costs $0.80 to $1.10 each, about 10 to 20 cents more than its predecessor. Raspberry Pi expects to be able to sell the microcontroller separately in larger quantities before the end of the year. The chip is already on a visitor’s badge at the Defcon show in Las Vegas. All told, Raspberry Pi says it has sold nearly 4 million Pico and Pico W boards in the 3.5 years since the first generation of Pico products were introduced.
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