Recently, Artery and Segger jointly announced that the J-Link debugger and Flasher** programmer fully support AT32 MCU products, and the support of Segger toolchain makes AT32 MCU development more powerful.
Since its launch in 2018, Artery has launched value-for-money, mainstream, high-performance, wireless and automotive MCUs based on the 32-bit ARM-Cortex-M4 core, and will soon announce the M0+ low-power series and motor-specific MCUs, with a total of more than 200 product models in six product series, providing a variety of package size product portfolios. Looking back on 2023, a total of 3 series products will be launched, such as the value-added multi-pin AT32F423 series, which will seize the high-performance application market with high cost performance; The automotive-grade AT32A403A series has passed the AEC-Q100 automotive-grade reliability certification, and is widely used in new energy vehicle fields such as body control, ADAS assisted driving, automotive audio-visual and BMS. The mainstream AT32F402 F405 series has built-in independent HS USB OTG (only supported by AT32F405) and FS USB OTG to meet the needs of the high-speed USB market. All of the above product series have supported Segger J-Link debugger and Flasher burner to meet the needs of customers from product development to production.
As one of the most widely used debugging tools on the market, Segger J-Link not only provides free software and firmware updates, but also has the advantages of a flash loader, high-speed** capabilities and an unlimited number of breakpoints in the flash of the MCU.
Artery said that by cooperating with Segger to provide customers with the best embedded development tools, in terms of performance, efficiency and ease of use, Segger's development and debugging platform is very user-friendly, and it also fully supports AT32 MCUs to shorten the product development and mass production process. "
Lionheart, General Manager of Segger Greater China, said that Segger and Artery Technology will continue to cooperate to provide complete programming and debugging tools to support the AT32 MCU, and jointly assist customers to complete project development and accelerate the time-to-market with leading performance, stability and high-quality products. "
About Segger:
Founded in 1992 by Rolf Segger, Segger has more than three decades of experience in the field of embedded systems, with advanced RTOS and software libraries, J-Link and J-Trace debugging and tracers, In-System programming programmer Flasher, and software development tools such as the Integrated Development Environment (IDE) Embedded studio, etc.