The Nordic Semiconductor nRF5340 DK is a development board with dual Cortex-M33 microcontrollers, QSPI flash, and an integrated BLE radio - and it's fully supported by Edge Impulse. You'll be able to sample raw data, build models, and deploy trained machine learning models directly from the studio. As the nRF5340 DK does not have any built-in sensors we recommend you to pair this development board with the X-NUCLEO-IKS02A1 shield (with a MEMS accelerometer and a MEMS microphone). The nRF5340 DK is available for around 50 USD from a variety of distributors.
If you don't have the X-NUCLEO-IKS02A1 shield you can use the Data forwarder to capture data from any other sensor, and then follow the Running your impulse locally: On your Zephyr-based Nordic Semiconductor development board tutorial to run your impulse. Or, you can modify the example firmware (based on nRF Connect) to interact with other accelerometers or PDM microphones that are supported by Zephyr.
The Edge Impulse firmware for this development board is open source and hosted on GitHub: edgeimpulse/firmware-nrf52840-5340.
To set this device up in Edge Impulse, you will need to install the following software:
On Linux:
GNU Screen: install for example via sudo apt install screen
.
Problems installing the CLI?
See the Installation and troubleshooting guide.
With all the software in place it's time to connect the development board to Edge Impulse.
Remove the pin header protectors on the nRF5340 DK and plug the X-NUCLEO-IKS02A1 shield into the development board.
Note: Make sure that the shield does not touch any of the pins in the middle of the development board. This might cause issues when flashing the board or running applications.
Use a micro-USB cable to connect the development board to your computer. There are two USB ports on the development board, use the one on the short side of the board. Then, set the power switch to 'on'.
The development board does not come with the right firmware yet. To update the firmware:
The development board is mounted as a USB mass-storage device (like a USB flash drive), with the name JLINK
. Make sure you can see this drive.
Drag the nrf5340-dk.bin
file to the JLINK
drive.
Wait 20 seconds and press the BOOT/RESET button.
From a command prompt or terminal, run:
This starts a wizard which asks you to log in and choose an Edge Impulse project. If you want to switch projects run the command with --clean
.
The nRF5340 DK exposes multiple UARTs. If prompted, choose the bottom one:
Alternatively, recent versions of Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge can collect data directly from your development board, without the need for the Edge Impulse CLI. See this blog post for more information.
That's all! Your device is now connected to Edge Impulse. To verify this, go to your Edge Impulse project, and click Devices. The device will be listed here.
With everything set up you can now build your first machine learning model with these tutorials:
Looking to connect different sensors? The Data forwarder lets you easily send data from any sensor into Edge Impulse.
If your board fails to flash new firmware (a FAIL.txt
file might appear on the JLINK
drive) you can also flash using nrfjprog
.
Install the nRF Command Line Tools.
Flash new firmware via: