I am just curious to find out.
Mostly Mac, some windows.
the computer on my electronics workbench is a windows xp machine, so that is where most of the "magic" happens
Ubuntu 9.10 64-bit - I moved to the Arduino after finding I couldn't get the Parallax bytecode "compiler" to work in 64-bit (the compiler was binary only, and statically linked to other libraries in the system - Parallax had lost touch with the developer of the Linux kit, and they didn't have a copy of the sourcecode - so they lost me as a user).
This machine is currently in my office.
I am in the process of building a machine for my workshop and bench; it will likely also be Ubuntu (or I may try something else), but it will likely be 32-bit as all the processors/boxen I have in my junk pile are 32-bit. What I am aiming to use for this box is an old iCue BookPC, hopefully with a 1 GHz+ Celeron and as much RAM as I can stuff in. I am also hoping to hack it to allow for a serial port in addition to the USB, but I am still researching that option (supposedly it is possible, in some manner - there's supposed to be pads on the mobo for a serial port somewhere). It does have a parallel port, though!
That's exactly what I use as well. Parallel port and serial ports certainly come in handy when doing MCU development.
Nobody on a mac.. interesting.
I just voted Mac, and westfw mentioned above he uses one, though it appears he didn't vote "mac" because there's only one vote tallied (mine?)
Too bad the poll wasn't multiple choice. I picked Mac because that's where most of my time happens now, but two weeks ago it woulda been Linux, and I'm always doing a little bit on my work laptop, too (Win XP).
I just modified the poll and you can make multiple choices now.
aye, sometimes I do a little bit of arduino tinkering with my craptop, and it has ubuntu (like my main machine I must point out)
but 90% of mcu development for me happens on that xp box, I could switch it to something else, then MPlab probably wont work (not like I do much pic-in here lately)
real reason is it hasnt shot up any BSOD's and I am just lazy enough and dont care lol
oops. I guess the vote doesn't register when you submit an associated message?
18 votes out of 100k+ Arduinos sold is not a statistically significant number.
out of 100k+ Arduinos sold is not a statistically significant number.
Interesting number, I would not have dared to take a guess at the total estimated population of Arduinos sold. Is that just 'real' Arduinos or total including 'clones' ?
Lefty
XP / Ubuntu 9.04 as per convenience.