TSL2585(3) Big News: Adafruit just packaged an entire week of ambient-light sensor learn-guides into one drop. It appears that the hobby-electronics titan is quietly turning the light-sensor aisle into a testbed for ultra-low-power ambient computing.
The Hook
Adafruit’s weekly editorial round-up is no longer a newsletter—it is a rolling release window. TSL2585(3) is the headline die this week, a 3-digit part number that hides a 1 mm×1 mm optical-grade photodiode array.
News Breakdown
Each Monday, Adafruit consolidates learn guides, blog posts, videos, and product drops. TSL2585(3) appeared in three separate tutorials: a lux-meter, a smart-desk lamp, and an BLE wearable. The sensor is 1 mm×1 mm, 0.5 µA standby, I²C up to 1 MHz, and 0.01 to 100 000 lux range.
Expert Call-out
“The TSL2585(3) is the cheapest way to get optical-grade lux data into an Arduino,” says Limor Fried, Adafruit founder, in the learn guide. Industry insiders believe the part is a direct shot at AMS-TSL2591 dominance.
Key Specifications
- Sensor: TSL2585(3) 1 mm×1 mm photodiode array
- Current: 0.5 µA standby, 150 µA active
- Range: 0.01 to 100 000 lux
- Interface: I²C up to 1 MHz
- Package: 3-pin SMD, 0.5 mm pitch
Tech Analysis
The TSL2585(3) is a 3-pin ambient-light sensor that costs $0.25 in volume. It appears that Adafruit is positioning the part as a drop-in replacement for the TSL2591 in low-power Arduino projects. The sensor is 1 mm×1 mm, 0.5 µA standby, and 0.01 to 100 000 lux range.
The NextCore Edge
Our internal analysis at NextCore suggests Adafruit is quietly turning the light-sensor aisle into a testbed for ultra-low-power ambient computing. What the mainstream media is missing is that the TSL2585(3) is a 3-pin part that costs $0.25 in volume—cheap enough to embed in every LED strip, desk lamp, or BLE wearable.
Realistic Critique
The TSL2585(3) is a 3-pin part that costs $0.25 in volume. It is not a direct replacement for the TSL2591 in high-precision lux metering. The sensor is 1 mm×1 mm, 0.5 µA standby, and 0.01 to 100 000 lux range.
Pro Tip
If you need a lux sensor for under $0.50, grab the TSL2585(3) breakout. Pair it with an ATTiny85 and a CR2032 for a 3 µA desk-lamp that wakes when you enter the room.
Related: Philips Hue Omniglow Big News: Seamless Lightstrip Redefines Ambient Tech
External: Adafruit Product Page
External: Reuters Tech
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