METRO Mini is the culmination of years of playing with AVRs: a tiny, breadboard-friendly development board that is easy to use and is hacker friendly.
They sure love the ATmega328 at Adafruit, the processor has plenty of GPIO, Analog inputs, hardware UART SPI and I2C, timers and PWM galore - just enough for most simple projects. When you need to go small, you can use a Pro Trinket 3V or 5V, but if you want to have USB-to-Serial built in, reach for an Adafruit METRO Mini.
Metro Mini can be programmed with the Arduino IDE (select 'UNO' in the boards dropdown)
ATmega328 brains - This popular chip has 32KB of flash (1/2 K is reserved for the bootloader), 2KB of RAM, clocked at 16MHz
Power the METRO Mini with 6-16V polarity protected on the Vin pin, or plug the micro USB connector to any 5V USB source.
METRO has 20 GPIO pins, 6 of which are Analog in as well, and 2 of which are reserved for the USB-serial converter. There's also 6 PWMs available on 3 timers (1 x 16-bit, 2 x 8-bit). There's a hardware SPI port, hardware I2C port and hardware UART to USB.
GPIO Logic level is 5V but by cutting and soldering closed a jumper on the bottom, you can easily convert it to 3.3V logic
5V onboard regulator with 150mA out, 3.3V 50mA available via FTDI chip
USB to Serial converter, there's a genuine FTDI hardware USB to Serial converter that can be used by any computer to listen/send data to the METRO, and can also be used to launch and update code via the bootloader
Four indicator LEDs, on the top of the PCB, for easy debugging. One green power LED, two RX/TX LEDs for the UART, and a red LED connected to pin PB5 / digital #13
Easy reprogramming, comes pre-loaded with the Optiboot bootloader
Beautiful styling by PaintYourDragon and Bruce Yan, in Adafruit Black with gold plated pads.
The Metro Mini comes as a fully assembled and tested board, with bootloader burned in and also a stick of 0.1" header. Some light soldering is required if you'd like to plug it into a breadboard, or you can solder wires or header directly to the breakout pads.
Detailed specifications:
ATmega328 microcontroller with Optiboot (UNO) Bootloader
USB Programming and debugging via the well-supported genuine FTDI FT231X
Input voltage (Vin): 6-16V (a 9VDC power supply is recommended)
5V logic with 3.3V compatible inputs, can be converted to 3.3V logic operation
20 Digital I/O Pins: 6 are also PWM outputs and 6 are also Analog Inputs
32KB Flash Memory - 0.5K for bootloader, 31.5KB available after bootloading
16MHz Clock Speed
Adafruit Black PCB with gold plate on pads
18mm x 44mm x 4mm / 0.7" x 1.7" x 0.2"
Weight: 3g
Derivative of "Arduino UNO R3 Reference design"
Open source hardware files on github!