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#1 Albornoz

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Posted 09 September 2010 - 02:30 AM

Gentlemen, NetDuino. It is compatible with arduino and have worked in this program and microprocessor. You can have more pins PB0 - PB18, PB24, PB26, PA2, PB8, PB9, PB16-PB27. I WISH TO MAKE MY OWN PBC. The compiler allows it? As long as we can move forward? Thank you.

#2 Chris Walker

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Posted 09 September 2010 - 03:34 AM

Hi Albornoz, Yes, you can certainly make your own PCB with more pins. All the hardware and software files are open source. We will also have an expansion solution for adding a bunch more pins before the end of the month. There are a few strategic reasons that we didn't expose more pins on the Netduino--and you'll find out one of those very very soon :) Chris

#3 Albornoz

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Posted 09 September 2010 - 05:00 PM

Thanks for your comments. Find a panda, is an option to my question is what would have. 1. I design my own cards with Arduino PCB with Eagle, have the libraries to NetDuino? Where I can buy the chips individually to make my projects? 2. The code can be protected? Hector

#4 Chris Walker

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Posted 09 September 2010 - 05:20 PM

1. I design my own cards with Arduino PCB with Eagle, have the libraries to NetDuino? Where I can buy the chips individually to make my projects?
2. The code can be protected?


Hi Hector,

1. Netduino is a 4-layer board, so you won't be able to design a card with the free version of Eagle (it's limited to 2-layers, etc.) But you can certainly build something in Eagle using the schematics and buy most of the parts from Digikey or a similar distributor. The hardware source files are on our downloads page.

2. If you're building a commercial end-user product, you can certainly protect your code. More details are in the .NET Micro Framework porting kit. For one, you'll want to build the RTM version of the .NET MF firmware.

Chris




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