Can you give me an example of a microcontroller that can run Linux in production (so, not just be made to run Linux experimentally, but which actually is used in applications were it’s worth it to run Linux on it) AND which costs less than $2 in bulk?
Because the only ones I can think of, the lower end of the Esp32 range, can run Linux but it’s just not worth it for the kind of applications they end up in.
The esp32-s3 is specifically one I was thinking of, its less then $2 for purchasing a single chip. You keep moving goal posts here, so I’ll just leave it. Have a good one.
“Moving goalposts” is asking you to back your claims versus the point I was making in the posts you replied to (which include the whole “in production” part)?!
Sure, mate, salve your ego after having blindly dived into deeper waters than you expected.
Can you give me an example of a microcontroller that can run Linux in production (so, not just be made to run Linux experimentally, but which actually is used in applications were it’s worth it to run Linux on it) AND which costs less than $2 in bulk?
Because the only ones I can think of, the lower end of the Esp32 range, can run Linux but it’s just not worth it for the kind of applications they end up in.
The esp32-s3 is specifically one I was thinking of, its less then $2 for purchasing a single chip. You keep moving goal posts here, so I’ll just leave it. Have a good one.
“Moving goalposts” is asking you to back your claims versus the point I was making in the posts you replied to (which include the whole “in production” part)?!
Sure, mate, salve your ego after having blindly dived into deeper waters than you expected.