
In April 2013, ST announced the STM32 F401-series chips.
In February 2013, ST announced the STM32 F4x9-series chips.
In February 2013, ST announced STM32 Embedded Coder support for MATLAB and Simulink.
Stm32cubemx segger embedded studio usb mass storage full#
In January 2013, ST announced full Java support for STM32 F2 and F4-series chips. The STM32 F050-series will also be available in a TSSOP20 package. In September 2012, ST announced full-production of STM32 F3-series chips and STM32F3DISCOVERY board. In June 2012, ST announced the STM32 F3-series chips based on the ARM Cortex-M4F core. In May 2012, ST announced the STM32F0DISCOVERY board. In February 2012, ST announced the STM32 F0-series chips based on the ARM Cortex-M0 core. In September 2011, ST announced the STM32 F4-series chips based on the ARM Cortex-M4F core and STM32F4DISCOVERY board. In March 2011, ST announced the expansion of their STM32 L1-series chips with flash densities of 256 KB and 384 KB. In February 2011, ST announced the STM32L-DISCOVERY board. In November 2010, ST announced the STM32 F2-series chips based on the ARM Cortex-M3 core, and future development of chips based on the ARM Cortex-M4 and ARM Cortex-M3 cores. In September 2010, ST announced the STM32VLDISCOVERY board. In April 2010, ST announced the STM32 L1-series chips. In October 2009, ST announced that new ARM chips would be built using the 90 nm process.
In November 2007, ST announced the low-cost "STM32-PerformanceStick" development kit in partner with Hitex. In June 2007, ST announced the STM32 F1-series based on the ARM Cortex-M3. In October 2006, STMicroelectronics (ST) announced that it licensed the ARM Cortex-M3 core.