For decades, chipmakers squeezed more transistors onto processors by shrinking them sideways. That playbook is running out of room. Now, a team of engineers has demonstrated a different strategy: ...
Less than two decades after smartphones fit into the palm of our hands, artificial intelligence is now running on devices ...
TTVKTR open-source firmware converts old IR remote controls into presentation clickers through Raspberry Pi RP2040 USB boards ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Monolithic 3D silicon chips achieve near-perfect yields at low temperatures
Researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have developed a way to stack high-performance ...
Reducing variation in manufacturing, monitoring behavior over time, and targeting specific workloads can have a big impact on ...
Tanaka Masayuki's PCMFlow722 library enables (half-duplex) two-way real-time HD voice over ESP-NOW on ESP32 boards with a speaker and a microphone, ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Engineers at Illinois just stacked silicon transistors three layers deep — 625 per layer, matching standard chip performance and finally giving Moore’s Law a new path for…
For decades, chipmakers kept Moore’s Law alive by shrinking transistors sideways, etching ever-finer features into flat slabs ...
Abstract: Control barrier functions (CBFs) are powerful tools for ensuring safety in controlled systems, commonly employed through the construction of a safety filter using quadratic programming (QP), ...
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