Using ESP32 Development Board with Termux on Android
By
gavide
A baker's-dozen of insight crammed into one ring.
Summary
A technical guide documenting the author's successful attempt to use an ESP32-WROOM-32 development board with Termux on an Android phone. The article provides step-by-step instructions for setting up the development environment, including requirements like USB data transfer cables, and serves as a reference for others interested in mobile embedded development.
Key quotes
· 4 pulledI wanted to play around with my ESP32-WROOM-32 development board, but apparently there is no online guide specifically for Termux
This is written for educational purposes
Make sure that your USB-A cable supports data transfer. This is crucial
I want to document the steps that worked for me as a future reference for myself and others
You might also wanna read
Google's Android Bench leaderboard ranks GPT 5.5 above Gemini for Android app development
Google launched the Android Bench benchmarking portal in March to help developers choose the best AI models for Android app development. The
bit.ly·1d agowolfCOSE: A Lightweight COSE + CBOR Library for Embedded Systems with PQC and FIPS 140-3 Support
wolfCOSE is a lightweight C library implementing CBOR (RFC 8949) and COSE (RFC 9052/9053) for embedded systems, using wolfSSL as the crypto
Google's Android Bench leaderboard ranks GPT 5.5 above Gemini for Android app development
Google launched the Android Bench benchmarking portal in March to help developers choose the best AI models for Android app development. The
bit.ly·2d agoHow an AI Engineer codes on his phone using encapsulated development
An AI Engineer at Notion describes how he maintains consistent productivity on his side project by coding on his phone using an "encapsulate
Running Rust and Slint on a Jailbroken Kindle Paperwhite
A developer jailbreaks their 7th generation Kindle Paperwhite to use it as a nightstand clock, then explores running Rust (and Slint) on the
MuseLab nanoCH32H417: $17 RISC-V MCU Board with USB 3.0 and Fast Ethernet
MuseLab has released the nanoCH32H417, a third-party development board for the WCH CH32H417 dual-core RISC-V MCU. Priced at $17, the board f
cnx-software.com·4d ago