RISC architecture is gonna change everything, and I still can’t tell if we like that movie ironically or not. Nevertheless, RISC-V chips are coming onto the market, chipmakers seem really interested ...
One of the joys of writing for Hackaday comes in following the world of new semiconductor devices, spotting interesting ones ...
Munich, Germany – March 6, 2025 – Infineon Technologies AG (FSE: IFX / OTCQX: IFNNY) leads the way for the adoption of RISC-V in the automotive industry: The company will launch a new automotive ...
Major automakers are accelerating commercialization of software-defined vehicle platforms that integrate software downloads, ...
Infineon Technologies is planning to launch a new automotive microcontroller family based on RISC-V within the next few years. Infineon plans to bring RISC-V MCU to the automotive industry Credit: ...
A new technical paper titled “X-HEEP: An Open-Source, Configurable and Extendible RISC-V Microcontroller” was published by researchers at Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL). Abstract: “In ...
The GD32VF103 is based on the Bumblebee core. This is the same core used by Andes Technology’s AndeStar V5 chip. The Bumblebee core supports the RV32IMAC instruction set. This means that it’s a 32-bit ...
SAN JOSE — A Renesas microcontroller employs proprietary flash memory and circuit technologies and an enhanced 32-bit SH-2 RISC core architecture that can simultaneously execute two instructions per ...
Microcontrollers exist in almost everything, but can RISC-V satisfy the needs of this market? Is it small enough to replace 8-bit processors? What might help people migrate to a more modern processor ...
Hitachi has introduced a 32-bit Risc microcontroller which has a processing speed of 65MIPS Dhrystone and offers 256kbyte of embedded full-speed flash memory and 8kbyte of RAM. It features a motor ...
DIY: Why spend nearly half a million dollars on a used supercomputer when you can build your own miniature version at home? That's exactly what one YouTuber recently did and the end result is quite ...