🚀 Tiny Tech Titan: Power, Vision & Connectivity in Your Palm
The Seeed Studio XIAO ESP32 S3 Sense is a compact, dual-core 240 MHz MCU board featuring advanced wireless (Wi-Fi & BLE 5.0), a detachable 1600x1200 OV2640 camera, digital microphone, and generous 8MB PSRAM + 8MB Flash memory. Designed for IoT and embedded machine learning, it supports Arduino and MicroPython, offers SD card expansion, and excels in space-limited applications like wearables.
Processor | 240 MHz |
RAM | PSRAM |
Wireless Type | Infrared |
Brand | seeed studio |
Series | XIAO ESP32S3 Sense |
Item model number | ESP32-S3 Sense |
Operating System | FreeRTOS |
Item Weight | 0.317 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 0.83 x 0.69 x 0.83 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 0.83 x 0.69 x 0.83 inches |
Color | ESP32S3 Sense |
Processor Brand | Espressif Systems |
Number of Processors | 2 |
Manufacturer | seeed studio |
ASIN | B0C69FFVHH |
Country of Origin | China |
Date First Available | May 25, 2023 |
L**N
ESP32C6 WiFi Access Point and Web Server Working Perfectly
I programmed it as a wifi access point and web server to deliver web pages to a web browser running on a tablet, cell phone, laptop or pc. I stored .png images on the esp32c6 using LittleFS that the web page was able to include in its display as an html body background image as well as html img images. I used Arduino IDE version 2.3.6 with C++. I have it defined as an XIAO_ESP32C6 board definition in the Arduino IDE. To get the onboard led to blink on and off, in void setup(), I specified pinMode(LED_BUILTIN,OUTPUT); and later in void loop() I was able to toggle it on and off in void loop() using digitalWrite(LED_BUILTIN,LOW); and digitalWrite(LED_BUILTIN,HIGH); I was also able to use a BME280 temperature sensor to the XIAO_ESP32C6 using pins D4 to SDA and D5 to SCL as well as supplying VIN and GND to the BME280. I will definitely be purchasing more of these XIAO_ESP32C6 microcontrollers.
M**K
Great price. Great size. Powerful
3 pack of esp32s3. Decent price. I was happy they included antennas. I soldered my own pins to the board. Soldered a 1000mah battery to the terminal. Each had a soil moisture sensor, temperature sensor, and humidity sensor.I have been using the esp32s3 variant for most of my projects due to the most robust support for micropython. With the power of these with cpu with micropython, it takes 30-60 minutes to prototype out the code. ESP now with micropython is very nice and all my sensors utilize it. Sensors all communicate with one master esp32s3 which communicates with an mqtt server. Xiao esp32s3 devices/sensors -> esp now -> master esp32s3 -> mqtt server -> database/triggers
P**X
Incredibly good package
These little ESP32C3s are an incredibly good package for the price. Very small, with a nice set of pin outs, a reasonably powerful SoC, and support for any number of external wifi antennas have made these my board of choice for a number of ESPHome powered automations, from weather stations to chicken coop monitoring equipment.It would be nice for the Amazon ones to offer a variant with headers soldered on, but its not really a terribly big deal to solder your own on.
L**M
Good tiny esp32 with nice docs
Worked greatGreat priceEasy to use and good docs on the seeeeeed site
P**R
Converting from wroom to c6 was not smooth, c3 ok
Update 5/1/25:The little flex antenna doesn’t work any better than the ceramic one and the higher gain antennas I have found do not improve bluetooth performance at all. In fact the 8db gain antennas I bought are *extremely* directional to bluetooth signals to the point that they don’t get anything from 10ft away if not aligned very precisely, though they do improve wifi signaling mightily in every orientation I tried.I upgraded the cores when I made a new pi4 build platform but it did not fix one glaring issue with these - the pin numbers in the tooling does not match the silkscreening on the part. For example with pin 2 designated as an output the signal appears on pin 0.Update:The 3.0.0 cores I updated to are dev, not stable. The Serial2 port doesn’t work on any esp32 core unless you explicitly declare a new hardwareserial object, for wroom do the begin call with the pin number parameters provided and those are rx=16 and tx=17 iirc. For c3 and c6 both accept the begin call with only the baud rate parameter iirc.Original:I have some BLE code running on wroom boards and tried converting to the c6 with little success, could be my methodology.I build using arduino-cli on headless Libre ROC boards. I upgraded the cores and added the XIAO ESP32C6 which was quite painful and then made some slight changes to my existing code to accommodate some slight refactoring done in the newer BLE libraries. That code runs fine on the old wroom boards built with the new core updates.Building for the c6 was not much trouble but the code didn’t work at all. I built a simple blink sketch and it did work but the serial.print statements never appear. No idea what is causing that but the led did blink as expected.It was probably wishful thinking that the change over would be simple. I don’t need any feature of the c6 so I’m going to try Seeeds c3 version.
A**R
The unit programed and performed as expected.
Used in building a hollow clock to control stepper motor. The unit programed and performed as expected.
C**S
Works as advertised! I have already bought another one.
I really appreciate how espressif simplified the whole process with micropython. I look forward to buying more. I have recommended it to a friend.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
1 day ago