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ferguess_klast Tuesday at 2:08 PM5 repliesview on HN

My first instinct to this piece of news is a five-char word starting with 'S'.

But reading through the news, it seems to be fine?

> Arduino will preserve its open approach and community spirit while unlocking a full‑stack platform for modern development—with Arduino UNO Q as the first step.

> The new Arduino UNO Q is a next-generation single board computer featuring a “dual brain” architecture—a Linux Debian-capable microprocessor and a real-time microcontroller—to bridge high-performance computing with real-time control.

Looks like they want to use the brand to push out their own stuffs, which seems to be reasonable. As long as they don't touch the education/OSS part I guess it will benefit both.


Replies

bilekaslast Tuesday at 2:18 PM

> Looks like they want to use the brand to push out their own stuffs, which seems to be reasonable. As long as they don't touch the education/OSS part I guess it will benefit both.

Given the current market for Qualcomm, it honestly wouldn't surprise me if in a few years they drop that education and OSS platform in favour of a paid approach. Recent Slack news doing the same has tainted my confidence.

33 Million audrino users, you can guarantee they want a piece of their wallets.

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dessimuslast Tuesday at 2:17 PM

Yeah, and nothing was going to change when IBM acquired Red Hat.

dimallast Tuesday at 5:11 PM

Whenever a VC backed company is acquired, the press release says "nothing will change, except for all these wonderful new things that the parent company will let us now do". A year later, things start to change. Two years later, the situation is unrecognizable. Qualcomm has no immediate financial incentive to support the education/OSS portion, and so they'll let it die. That's how these things always go.

Arduino is over. In reality, as soon as they took VC funding, it was over.

mtlynchlast Tuesday at 2:45 PM

>My first instinct to this piece of news is a five-char word starting with 'S'.

Am I the only one who can't figure out the word?

Did you mean four characters? Or are you including a null-terminator? Extra 'e' if you're British?

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mrheosuperlast Tuesday at 2:33 PM

Just like when Broadcom bought VMware. Great stuff /s.