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The only difference between Atmega328 and Atmega328p is picopower, which implies some small instruction set and register changes to enable lower power. So likely both will work equally well for you.
The extensions indicate package information. -P* means PDIP package. PN has a higher operating temperature range than PU.
Saurabh
giuliano carlini
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May 19, 2013, 2:41:18 AM5/19/13
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The 328p's can run at 3.3v. If you have sensors or other components that can't run at 5v, it simplifies things.
giuliano
William Garrido
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Jun 18, 2013, 11:52:11 AM6/18/13
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Little late, but I should mention that the Arduino IDE won't recognize the non P version.