On November 19th, we held a 60-minute Ask Me Anything session to address your questions about the new Arduino UNO Q, Arduino App Lab, accessible AI, and Arduino’s path forward. Thank you to everyone who joined us live and submitted questions!

As our moderator Julie Chevrier mentioned right away, we have been listening to the community closely and were eager to answer your questions through this AMA – to provide you with information straight from the source, bringing together experts from across the Arduino ecosystem: Andrea Richetta (Arduino Principal Product Evangelist), Adam Benzion (Director, Strategic Partnerships at Qualcomm Technologies, Inc.), Rami Mouro (Senior Engineer and Developer Advocate at Qualcomm Technologies, Inc.), Louis Moreau (Head of Developer Relations at Edge Impulse), and Erwan Gouriou (Principal Software Engineer at STMicroelectronics).

We’ve highlighted some of the key questions addressed during the session below and encourage you to watch the full recording on YouTube.

Community first!

Before diving into the Q&A, we opened the session with a video showcasing incredible projects users have already built with Arduino UNO Q in just over a month since product launch. From retro arcade cabinets and animated pumpkins to weather stations, robot object classification, and even a sound-triggered jacket… you all are our inspiration.

Top questions for the expert panel

The community was also our source for the most frequently asked questions we addressed in the first part of the session – collected from social media and online forums leading up to the event. 

From strictly technical to strategic vision, we discussed it all! Here are just a few of the topics:

The elephant in the room: will Arduino remain open source?

This question came up multiple times and in various forms. The answer was unequivocal: yes. Adam emphasized that there’s a 100% commitment to maintain Arduino’s open-source ethos. The Gerber files for UNO Q were released publicly shortly after launch. The board runs Zephyr RTOS under the hood, and Arduino engineers are actively contributing upstream. Actions matter more than words, and Arduino’s actions demonstrate ongoing commitment to open source.

Let’s go live!

In the second half of the session, we fielded questions directly from YouTube chat. Here is just a taste of what you can find in the full video:

What’s next

Keep an eye on our YouTube channel for upcoming sessions, including deep-dives into real-time systems and more Arduino UNO Q tutorials. This AMA was just one of many ways we’re working to maintain open dialogue with the community. We’re aware that change can feel uncertain, and we appreciate those who asked tough questions. That openness is what makes this community strong.

Have questions? Leave a comment on the YouTube recording of the live session or join the discussion on the Arduino Forums: our team is active there, and eager to help. Thank you for being part of this journey!

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