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Raspberry Pi Clone Sports 1.84 GHz Intel Cherry Trail Processor Radxa has posted specs for a new member of its community backed "Rock Pi" Raspberry Pi lookalike SBC family, this time with an Intel Cherry Trail Atom x5-Z8300, USB 3.0, microSD, HDMI, eDP/MIPI and GbE, plus optional Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.2 LE. In June, Radxa unveiled its Rock Pi S SBC that runs Linux on a RK3308 and updated its RK3399-based Rock Pi 4 with extra memory. Now, Radxa is preparing to add to that family of Raspberry Pi pseudo clones with an SBC called Rock Pi X, based on the Intel "Cherry Trail" Atom x5-Z8300. We learned about the new board from our friends at Hackerboards, who added the Rock Pi X to its database. CONTINUE READING iWave Demos Xen Virtualizationon its I.MX8QM-Based Module iWave Systems has announced that it has successfully demonstrated the Xen virtualization hypervisor on their i.MX8 QM SoC based System on Module. The SMARC R2.0 compatible SOM is based on the i.MX8 QuadMax SoC. The SoC is comprised of 2x Arm Cortex-A72 cores at 1.8 GHz and 4x Arm Cortex-A53 cores at 1.2 GHz and 2x additional Cortex-M4F cores at 266 MHz. On the i.MX8 QM, iWave has implemented the virtualization of hardware using the open-source type 1 Xen hypervisor. The Xen hypervisor enables multiple virtual machines to be created over a single hardware resource, each virtual machine capable of running its independent operating system. This enables i.MX8 QM SOM (shown) to run multiple operating systems concurrently on the same physical board. The Xen hypervisor allows maximum utilization of resources thereby improving overall system performance and efficiency. CONTINUE READING Learn How to Make Your Code Faster, Smaller & Smarter You spend days, weeks or even months perfecting the code that will get your application off the ground and make your product a success. Trust IAR Systems' tools to meet your high standards by making your code even faster, smaller and smarter while ensuring robustness and high quality. Trust their team to guide you in creating safe, secure and power-efficient applications ensuring that your products can be delivered to the market on schedule, and on target. The toolchain IAR Embedded Workbench gives you a complete IDE with everything you need in one single view---ensuring quality, reliability and efficiency in your embedded application. IAR Embedded Workbench is by many considered by many the best compiler and debugger toolchain in the industry. In fact, over 150,000 developers all over the world are using it. Watch this video to learn how you can benefit from using this powerful tool! GO HERE TO WATCH THE VIDEO | Current Issue SEE INSIDE Subscriber Login Learn More About Circuit Cellar Sample Issue Editorial Calendar Shop Archive Magazine Issues Books Subscribe Advertise We can get your message out to the professional engineering community. Contact Hugh Heinsohn today at [email protected]! Stay Connected |
Qualcomm IPQ4019-Based SoM and Dev Board Run OpenWrt Linux The "Habanero" module from 8devices runs OpenWrt on Qualcomm's IPQ4019 SoC. The $55 open spec board supports dual-band, MU-MIMO 802.11ac (Wave2). A development kit for with module adds 5 Ethernet ports and USB. 8devices has added the Habanero as a new member to its line of dual-band system-on-modules (SOMs). The SOM is available in two versions. The Habanero, based on Qualcomm's IPQ4019 SoC, is open for pre-orders for $55. And the Habanero-I, based on Qualcomm's IPQ4029 SoC can be bought on pre-order for $69. A $119 development kit, the Habanero DVK, provides the IPQ4019 SoC along with Ethernet, USB and other I/O. 8devices provides a number of modules that run OpenWrt Linux, the most recent of which was its Komikan SOM based on a MIPS24k-based Realtek SoC. The Habanero appears to be the company's 2nd module based on a Qualcomm SoC, following its IPQ4018 SoC-based Jalapeno board. CONTINUE READING Win a Free Subscription to Circuit Cellar Magazine! This week's newsletter raffle is for a 1-year free subscription to Circuit Cellar! Drawing ends at midnight this coming Friday. Circuit Cellar is the premier media resource for professional engineers, academic technologists, and other electronics technology decision-makers worldwide involved in the design and development of embedded processor- and microcontroller-based systems across a broad range of applications. ENTER THE DRAWING HERE And congratulations to last week's raffle winner, Zygmunt S., who won a 2018 Digital Archive of Circuit Cellar magazine. Thanks to all who participated! |
We Want Your Technical Article in Circuit Cellar Magazine Circuit Cellar magazine is always looking for top-notch technical articles that help readers better understand embedded electronics technology in action. Professional engineers, academics, students and serious electronics enthusiasts are encouraged to submit articles and proposals. Whether its a project-based article, an article about a technology trend, or an analysis of a technical issue or challenge, Circuit Cellar is looking for insightful, detailed articles that help its readers do their jobs as embedded system designers. If you have an article or an article proposal, let us know! Our article submissions page provides you with our requirements and guidelines. GO TO OUR ARTICLE SUBMISSIONS PAGE RK3399-Based Raspberry Pi Clone Starts at $75 FriendlyElec has released an upgraded version of its Rockchip RK3399 based SBC, the NanoPi-M4. Called NanoPi M4V2, the new $70 board is mostly identical to its predecessor, but offers 4 GB of LPDDR4 RAM, along with two user buttons for power and recovery. A little over a year ago, FriendlyElec rolled out its third RK3399 based SBC of 2018, the NanoPi-M4. The board seemed to hit on a sweet spot tradeoff in terms of an affordable SBC with a decent amount of RAM. Now the company has launched an upgraded version, the NanoPi-M4 that has 4 GB or RAM while moving to the more advanced LPDDR4, in contrast to the NanoPi M4's LPDDR3. While the NanoPi-M4 costs $75 in its 4 GB version ($50 for 2 GB), the new NanoPi-M4V2 with 4 GB costs only $70. The new board adds two new users buttons-for power and recovery-that were not on the original NanoPi-M4. Other differences on the new NanoPi M4V2 include 2Ã2 MIMO support and an inconsequential heavier weight of 50.62 grams (versus 47.70g). CONTINUE READING Enter to Win VersaLogic's New Android Demo/Eval Kit! VersaLogic's new Android Eval Kit provides an easy way to evaluate Arm/Android performance for rapid design and application development. It includes everything needed to run the Android OS on a high-reliability embedded system, including an Arm-based embedded computer board and a touch-screen display. No additional carrier cards, companion boards or other add-ons are needed. The Android Eval Kit is designed to save start-up time and allow the user to focus on their product development. GO HERE TO ENTER THE DRAWING SMARC 2.0 module runs Linux on i.MX8M Mini Congatec's "Conga-SMX8-Mini" SMARC 2.0 module runs Linux on NXP's i.MX8M Mini with up to 4 GB LPDDR4 and 128 GB eMMC and optional Wi-Fi and -40 to 85°C. There's also a new carrier and coolers for Congatec's Epyc 3000 based conga-B7E3 module. NXP's power-efficient, 14 nm FinFET fabricated i.MX8M Mini has attracted considerable support among computer-on-module manufacturers, starting with Variscite's DART-MX8M-Mini. Yet, Congatec's new Conga-SMX8-Mini is only the second SMARC 2.0 form-factor module we've seen after Avnet's MSC SM2S-IMX8MINI. The new product follows Congatec's similarly SMARC-compliant Conga-SMX8, which uses the higher-end i.MX8 QuadMax, QuadPlus or DualMax. Congatec touts the module for its MIPI-CSI-2 interface and support for an upcoming SMARC MIPI-CSI-2 starter kit to be released in cooperation with industrial camera manufacturer Basler. CONTINUE READING Industry News & Recent Posts Lauterbach has announced that Hypervisor trace capability is now available for Arm Cortex-A and NXP QorIQ. Hypervisor tracing, which also means multicore tracing, requires high bandwidths from the off-chip tracing interface. The TRACE32 debug tool can now be used to trace all components in a Hypervisor based embedded system, as well as debug them. ... Continue reading →...» Aimtec has announced a 5 W AC/DC converter, the AMEL5-277NZ, that has been designed to offer greater economies of scale due to greater production automation, leading to improved reliability and performance. Offering a wide industrial input voltage range of 85-305 VAC and an output voltage range from 3.3-24 V, this series offers many benefits for embedded systems designs. ... Continue reading →...» Renesas Electronics has announced the Renesas RX65N Cloud Kit featuring onboard Wi-Fi, environmental, light and inertial sensors and support for Amazon FreeRTOS connected to Amazon Web Services (AWS). The kit gives embedded designers a fast start and secure connection to AWS. ... Continue reading →...» Maxim Integrated has announced fuel gauge ICs which that company claims offers the most configurable settings for battery safety in the industry and uniquely allow fine tuning of voltage and current thresholds based on various temperature zones. ... Continue reading →...» TT Electronics has announced two new surface mount device (SMD) power inductors: the HM66M series (shown) for use in high frequency power conversion systems and EMI filter applications, and the HM78M series for use in high density and high frequency DC/DC converter applications. ... Continue reading →...» A Twist on Modern Instruments Normally, you'd think that taking the strings out of a harp would be a downgrade. But in this article, Cornell student Alex Hatzis presents a system that does just that-replacing the harp strings with red lasers. ... Continue reading →...» |
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