In its 56F83xx family of microcontrollers, Motorola has introduced a series of devices that it intends to meet uprated processing needs in today's systems—particularly in automotive systems—while ...
NXP Semiconductors has introduced the S32K5 family of automotive microcontrollers (MCUs), marking the industry's first 16nm FinFET MCU with embedded magnetic RAM (MRAM). This new MCU family is ...
The automotive electronics industry continues to expand its use of 8-bit and 16-bit microcontrollers (MCUs). With the MCU being the cornerstone of electronic control modules (ECMs), from safety ...
Understand how lockstep architecture improves fault detection, redundancy, and real-time reliability in safety-critical microcontroller systems. Explore the applications of lockstep processors in ...
Freescale debuts three new Power Architecture microcontrollers for automotive designs – Next-generation 32-bit MCUs optimized for cost-sensitive chassis, safety, instrument cluster and body ...
This article is part of our reviews of AI research papers, a series of posts that explore the latest findings in artificial intelligence. Deep learning models owe their initial success to large ...
The Raspberry Pi Pico 2 is an upgraded version of the original Pico microcontroller, featuring enhanced performance, increased memory, improved power efficiency, and new security features. It retains ...
For years it was a given that it was impossible to run a Linux based operating system on a less powerful computer whose architecture lacked a memory management unit. There were projects such as ...
An open-source ecosystem allows sharing application resources and providing technical support through an active developers’ community. OpenPLC is a programming editor that support the International ...
As computer systems become more and more ubiquitous in everyday items, the workings of those items will require some sort of digital controlling. Controllers that once handled large mechanical systems ...
In fact, the only question that most automotive engineers may be asking is not about the capability of software-defined cars ...