EFR32xG24 Dev Kit

by Silicon Labs

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The xG24 Dev Kit is a low-cost, small form factor development and evaluation platform for the EFR32MG24 Wireless Gecko System-on-Chip

The board is a small and cost-effective, feature-rich, prototype and development platform based on the EFR32™ Wireless Gecko System-on-Chip. The xG24 Dev Kit is an ideal platform for developing energy-friendly connected IoT devices.

A built-in SEGGER J-Link debugger ensures easy debugging through the USB Micro-B connector.

Features

  • EFR32 Wireless Gecko System-on-Chip(EFR32MG24B310F1536IM48-B)
  • High-performance 2.4 GHz radio
  • 32-bit ARM® Cortex®-M33 with 78.0 MHz maximum operating frequency
  • 1536 flash and 256 kB RAM
  • 32 Mbit external flash
  • 2.4 GHz ceramic chip antenna
  • Relative humidity and temperature sensor
  • Ambient light sensor
  • Hall effect sensor
  • 6-axis inertial sensor
  • Pressure sensor
  • RGB LED and two push buttons
  • 20-pin 2.54 mm breakout pads
  • Qwiic® connector
  • SEGGER J-Link on-board debugger
  • Virtual COM port
  • Packet Trace Interface (PTI)
  • USB or coin cell battery powered
  • External battery connector

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CircuitPython 9.0.4

This is the latest stable release of CircuitPython that will work with the EFR32xG24 Dev Kit.

Use this release if you are new to CircuitPython.

Release Notes for 9.0.4

Built-in modules available: _asyncio, _bleio, _pixelmap, adafruit_bus_device, adafruit_pixelbuf, aesio, analogio, array, atexit, binascii, bitmaptools, board, builtins, builtins.pow3, busdisplay, busio, busio.SPI, busio.UART, codeop, collections, digitalio, displayio, epaperdisplay, errno, fontio, fourwire, framebufferio, getpass, gifio, i2cdisplaybus, io, jpegio, json, locale, math, microcontroller, msgpack, nvm, onewireio, os, os.getenv, pwmio, rainbowio, random, re, rtc, sdcardio, select, sharpdisplay, storage, struct, supervisor, sys, terminalio, time, traceback, ulab, vectorio, warnings, watchdog, zlib

Included frozen(?) modules: adafruit_ble, adafruit_register

CircuitPython 9.1.0-beta.1

This is the latest development release of CircuitPython that will work with the EFR32xG24 Dev Kit.

Alpha development releases are early releases. They are unfinished, are likely to have bugs, and the features they provide may change. Beta releases may have some bugs and unfinished features, but should be suitable for many uses. A Release Candidate (rc) release is considered done and will become the next stable release, assuming no further issues are found.

Please try alpha, beta, and rc releases if you are able. Your testing is invaluable: it helps us uncover and find issues quickly.

Release Notes for 9.1.0-beta.1

Built-in modules available: _asyncio, _bleio, _pixelmap, adafruit_bus_device, adafruit_pixelbuf, aesio, analogio, array, atexit, binascii, bitmapfilter, bitmaptools, board, builtins, builtins.pow3, busdisplay, busio, busio.SPI, busio.UART, codeop, collections, digitalio, displayio, epaperdisplay, errno, fontio, fourwire, framebufferio, getpass, gifio, i2cdisplaybus, io, jpegio, json, locale, math, microcontroller, msgpack, nvm, onewireio, os, os.getenv, pwmio, rainbowio, random, re, rtc, sdcardio, select, sharpdisplay, storage, struct, supervisor, sys, terminalio, time, traceback, ulab, vectorio, warnings, watchdog, zlib

Included frozen(?) modules: adafruit_ble, adafruit_register

Absolute Newest

Every time we commit new code to CircuitPython we automatically build binaries for each board and language. The binaries are stored on Amazon S3, organized by board, and then by language. These releases are even newer than the development release listed above. Try them if you want the absolute latest and are feeling daring or want to see if a problem has been fixed.

Previous Versions of CircuitPython

All previous releases of CircuitPython are available for download from Amazon S3 through the button below. For very old releases, look in the OLD/ folder for each board. Release notes for each release are available at GitHub button below.

Older releases are useful for testing if you something appears to be broken in a newer release but used to work, or if you have older code that depends on features only available in an older release. Otherwise we recommend using the latest stable release.