The history of the Screvle project starts many years ago. As an embedded systems consultant and hobbyist I was often looking for an easy to use, open hardware platform to start from when building the next thing. There are our beloved Arduino's and mbed's, but there is still a lot missing before they are useable in some applications (e.g. buttons, display, ethernet, SD-card,...). When you put all the shields and boards together you end of with a nice proof of concept, but the result is not useable outside the lab (read: by non-engineers). Expensive custom PCB design was often needed.
Out of frustration of always re-inventing the wheel I started to create Screvle hardware. I wanted a modern CPU (ARM Cortex-M3, later upgraded to Cortex-M4), a decent display (QVGA + touchscreen), a few buttons, an LED, Ethernet, USB and an SD-card. And expansion headers with all types of embedded I/O to connect project specific hardware. Currently at revision 3 of the PCB, it now also comes with a Li-Ion charger and optional Wifi module.
The Screvle PCB is designed to fit in a commercially available enclosure (Hammond 1553C), so as a whole Screvle is a real product, not an engineering tool. This allows to take your hacks out of the lab into the real world for everyone to enjoy.
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