News

What’s truly amazing is that this ends up with a simulation of how the ESP32’s WiFi works on the inside that’s so good that he can run Python MQTT libraries on the simulated device, ...
2 thoughts on “ Low-Resolution Fluid Simulation On An ESP32 ” scott_tx says: February 28, 2025 at 12:59 pm neato, I like that. Report comment. Reply. William Payne says: ...
An undocumented set of low-level commands has been discovered in the ESP32 microchip, a widely used component in IoT devices. Manufactured by the Chinese company Espressif, the ...
It has 2.33 inch, 480 x 222 pixel IPS LCD display, an ESP32-S3 dual-core 240 MHz processor with support for WiFi 4 and Bluetooth 5, 8MB of PSRAM, and 16MB of flash memory.
But this model is powered by a modern, low-power ESP32-S3 processor (with two low-power Xtensa LX7 32-bit microprocessors running at 240 MHz and support for WiFi 4 and Bluetooth 4.2 LE. And it has ...