Lattice Semiconductor Corporation has announced the immediate availability of the LatticeMico32, a 32-bit soft microprocessor optimized for Lattice Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs). Lattice is ...
RV32-WUJI. a, Bottom, 24 WUJI chips produced on a 4-inch sapphire wafer. Top, zoomed-in optical microscope image showing a single die with an area of 6 mm × 6 mm, consisting of 5,900 MoS 2 transistors ...
Brit chipmaker Pragmatic Semiconductor has created a 32-bit microprocessor in a "flexible technology that is fully functional while flexed."… The Flex-RV processor isn't about winning performance ...
San Jose, Calif.&#151 Renesas Technology America, Inc.’s new SH7397 “Euclid” 32-bit microprocessor has been developed for enhanced telematics and similar types of in-vehicle information systems. Based ...
If you have never heard of the Bellmac-32, you aren’t alone. But it is a good bet that most, if not all, of the CPUs in your devices today use technology pioneered by this early 32-bit CPU. The chip ...
Union IT minister Ashwini Vaishnaw on Tuesday presented the first “Made in India” chip to Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the inauguration of Semicon India 2025 in Delhi. The minister handed over the ...
Intentionally bendy, anyway. I'm sure you could bend most of them a bit if you really, really tried. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it ...
The "Microprocessor Market Till 2035: Distribution by Type of Architecture, Size, Bit Size, Core Count, Areas of Application, Type of Microprocessor, Company Size, and Key Geographical Regions: ...
Co-developed by Actel and ARM, the Cortex-M1 32-bit, soft-core processor is designed for use with Actel's flash-based, M1-enabled Fusion and ProASIC3 FPGAs. Removing the license and royalty fees, ...
32-bit processors and operating systems, in theory, can access up to 4GB of memory. So how come Qasim Zaib’s PC, with 4GB installed, only sees 3GB? Every byte of RAM requires its own address, and the ...
Why it matters: As you can probably attest, modern wearables can be slapped on a wrist or slotted in an ear without a problem. But they're not subtle enough, neither in their design or cost, to be ...