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Infineon and DG Matrix partner to drive solid-state transformer technology for AI data centers and industrial power applications
Voltage multiplier
| I've been designing this 6-stage symmetrical half-wave voltage multiplier build. I was planning to build it like this: battery->zvs circuit for getting ac and proper 50kHz frequency->small transformer for upping the voltage to 10kV->multiplier. The lower part generates negative voltage, and the upper part positive, both 120kV so combined they give a 240kV spark. [link] [comments] |
Power Integrations extends flyback topology to 440W, offering simpler alternatives to resonant power designs
Power Integrations extends flyback topology to 440W, offering simpler alternatives to resonant power designs
Toshiba showcases power semiconductor solutions at APEC
Toshiba showcases power semiconductor solutions at APEC
Renesas unveils first bidirectional 650V-class GaN switch for solar power inverters, AI data centers and onboard EV chargers
Renesas unveils first bidirectional 650V-class GaN switch for solar power inverters, AI data centers and onboard EV chargers
💡 Молодих науковців запрошують взяти участь у Фестивалі молодіжної науки – 2026
До Дня науки Рада молодих вчених при Міністерстві освіти і науки України запрошує взяти участь у Фестивалі молодіжної науки – 2026. Мета заходу – популяризація наукових здобутків молодих вчених, налагодження співпраці між молодими науковцями в рамках роботи за науковими напрямами, встановлення зв’язків з основними стейкголдерами та зарубіжними партнерами в умовах війни.
R&S amplifiers enable high-field immunity testing expansion at IB Lenhardt Lab
IBL Lab GmbH, the DAkkS (Deutsche Akkreditierungsstelle GmbH) accredited EMC test laboratory of IB Lenhardt AG, has significantly expanded its high-field immunity testing capabilities with a substantial investment in a suite of high-power amplifier systems from Rohde & Schwarz. This upgrade directly addresses increasing demands from the defence sector for rigorous and realistic testing compliant with standards like MIL-STD-461, AECTP-500, VG 95373 and VG 95370.
The core of this optimisation lies in the deployment of the R&S BBA300-FG180 amplifier (6-18 GHz), coupled with a Schwarzbeck HWRD650 EMS antenna through a direct-mount configuration. This approach eliminates RF cable losses, enabling IBL Lab to achieve field strengths exceeding 400 V/m – a level rarely attained – with a target of surpassing 600 V/m.
The integration of Rohde & Schwarz equipment provides several key advantages for IB Lenhardt. A comprehensive testing range from 9 kHz to 18 GHz is now supported by the integrated system comprising the R&S BBA300-FG180, R&S BBL200A-A5000, R&S BBA150-BC2000, and R&S BBA300-DE1000 amplifiers. Direct antenna mounting on the BBA300-FG180 maximises power transfer and significantly boosts field strength in the 6-18 GHz range, a capability crucial for demanding defence applications.
As Florian Schmidt, Head of Department EMC at IBL Lab GmbH, explains: “Direct antenna mounting on the BBA300-FG180 was the key to achieving field strengths exceeding 400 V/m in the 6–18 GHz range. Combined with our other amplifiers, this setup enables high-field immunity testing across the entire frequency range from 9 kHz to 18 GHz for demanding defence applications.”
Furthermore, amplifiers like the R&S BBA300-FG180 and R&S BBA300-DE1000 offer wide frequency coverage alongside high linearity, while the R&S BBL200A-A5000 delivers 5 kW of continuous power with 100% mismatch tolerance. Leveraging Rohde & Schwarz’s reputation for precision and reliability reinforces IBL Lab’s DAkkS accreditation (ISO/IEC 17025) and NATO CAGE Code (CNH80), bolstering confidence in test results.
Finally, IBL Lab’s position as one of the first laboratories globally to operate the R&S BBA300-DE1000 demonstrates a commitment to utilising cutting-edge testing capabilities. Daniel Lenhardt, CEO of IB Lenhardt AG, says: “High field strengths and stable RF signals are essential for realistic and reliable immunity testing, underscoring the strategic importance of this investment. The combination of high performance and broad frequency coverage positions IBL Lab to effectively serve manufacturers of defence, aerospace, automotive, and industrial electronics requiring advanced RF immunity validation.”
The post R&S amplifiers enable high-field immunity testing expansion at IB Lenhardt Lab appeared first on ELE Times.
Турклуб "Глобус": змагання, перемоги і донати
Наприкінці лютого Турклуб "Глобус" традиційно організовує і проводить міські змагання з техніки гірського туризму "Сніговий барс". Чудова атмосфера Голосіївського парку, цікаві етапи та можливість показати свою технічну майстерність приваблюють десятки спортсменів та вболівальників.
India’s Electronics Powerplay: Why 2026 Will Lead the Way for the Industry
India’s electronics and semiconductor sector is currently experiencing a significant turning point in its trajectory. This transformation is primarily fuelled by key government initiatives such as the Production Linked Incentive (PLI), Electronic Manufacturing Clusters Scheme (EMCS), and Design Linked Incentive (DLI) schemes. In addition, the sector is benefiting from the realignment of global supply chains towards India and the anticipated growth in domestic demand. As a result of these factors, industry projections indicate that the sector is on track to reach a market value of US$500 billion by the year 2030. This rapid evolution signifies India’s transition from being a consumption-driven market to emerging as a prominent global centre for innovation, manufacturing excellence, and intellectual property (IP) development.
At the core of this momentum are events such as Electronica India and Productronica India, which are organised by Messe Muenchen India. These platforms have transformed beyond mere trade shows and have become pivotal drivers of industry advancement. By bringing together policymakers, international investors, pioneers, suppliers, and producers in a single setting, these events facilitate more than just conversations. They lead to tangible results such as establishing new collaborations, transferring technology, integrating supply chains, and translating policies into market opportunities that enhance India’s electronics value chain.
In a highly insightful discussion, the President of IMEA (India, Middle East, Africa) at Messe München, along with the CEO of Messe München India, sheds light on India’s remarkable journey from a consumption-oriented market to a prominent global electronics manufacturing hub. Recognising the imperative need to keep pace with the swiftly evolving industry landscape, electronica India and productronica India are making a strategic shift to a biannual schedule commencing from April 2026 in Greater Noida. These cutting-edge platforms, revered as “decision-grade” marketplaces, are strategically designed to streamline the supply chain operations, showcasing over 400 exhibitors and fostering collaborative partnerships, technological advancements, and bolstering domestic production capabilities.
In a recent conversation with Bhupinder Singh, President of India, Middle East, and Africa at Messe München, as well as the Chief Executive Officer of Messe München India, we discussed…
ELETimes: India’s electronics landscape has evidently undergone a significant transformation. In your opinion, which pivotal shift do you believe is driving the market trends presently?
Bhupinder Singh: The crucial transition happening in the current landscape, shifting from intent to execution at a large scale. With capacity increasing, compliance becoming stricter, and decision-making processes becoming more efficient, the market must enhance its capability to assess technologies, validate partners, and smoothly progress from planning to implementation without delays caused by evaluating multiple vendors. In such a dynamic setting, business platforms should not only bring stakeholders together but also facilitate productive outcomes.
ELETimes: What sets electronica India and productronica India apart as marketplaces in 2026?
Bhupinder Singh: Our role is to simplify a complex supply chain by reducing friction. Given the deeply interconnected nature of electronics manufacturing, Electronica India and Productronica India bring the entire value chain into a single, focused environment—enabling companies to evaluate solutions end-to-end, align cross-functional stakeholders, and make more confident decisions. Ultimately, this is not just a showcase, but a purpose-built, decision-grade marketplace.
ELETimes: What level of scale and participation can the industry anticipate from the April 2026 editions?
Bhupinder Singh: Scale matters—but what truly drives outcomes is decision density. The April 2026 edition is built around high-intent engagement, bringing together 400+ exhibitors representing over 1,000 companies from 20+ countries, connecting with an expected 30,000+ trade attendees. Through live demonstrations, operational equipment, supplier interactions, and structured meetings, participants can evaluate solutions in a focused setting. With multiple options available in one place, teams can benchmark more efficiently, compare with greater accuracy, and accelerate decision-making. In effect, the event condenses months of fragmented vendor assessments into a few days of meaningful, high-value evaluation—because attendees don’t come to browse; they come to make decisions.
ELETimes: What prompted the shift to hosting two editions each year at this point?
Bhupinder Singh: The pace of the industry has fundamentally shifted. Product cycles are shorter, supplier qualification is more stringent, and project timelines leave far less room for delay. A single annual—or even biennial—touchpoint no longer reflects how companies make decisions, build, and scale today.
This transition also aligns with the momentum driven by India’s PLI and ECMS schemes, which are accelerating investments across electronics components, products, and systems manufacturing, while enabling faster capacity expansion across regions.
Taking all of this into account, from 2026 we are moving to a biannual format: Greater Noida in April and Bengaluru in September—two key markets, two distinct buying cycles, and two strategic opportunities each year to evaluate solutions, strengthen partnerships, and fast-track implementation.
ELETimes: What new opportunities does a biannual format create for exhibitors?
Bhupinder Singh: It creates three distinct advantages: speed, precision and responsiveness.
First, pipeline velocity improves—exhibitors can engage buyers more frequently, which directly supports conversion.
Second, regional precision—North and South are both high-opportunity, but they operate differently in procurement cycles and ecosystem density.
Third, market responsiveness—brands can launch updates, gather feedback and recalibrate strategy with far less lag. In electronics, speed is not a nice-to-have. It’s a competitive advantage.
And for visitors, it means access. If you’re sourcing, building, or scaling in India, you don’t have to wait for a single annual sourcing window. You can qualify suppliers, shortlist faster and keep projects moving with a six-month rhythm.
ELETimes: The April edition is being hosted in Uttar Pradesh—what new value or advantage does this bring to the event?
Bhupinder Singh: Hosting changes the quality of engagement. With Uttar Pradesh as host, the presence of relevant government departments and institutional stakeholders becomes structural—not optional. For international and domestic participants, a host state context brings sharper visibility on facilitation and readiness—so expansion conversations move from exploratory to executable
ELETimes: The event will be inaugurated by Hon’ble Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh, Shri Yogi Adityanath—what message does this send to the broader industry?
Bhupinder Singh: It reflects a clear strategic commitment. Electronics sits at the core of national competitiveness and industrial growth, and the strength of state ecosystems increasingly determines the pace of progress. An inauguration led by the Chief Minister underscores electronics as a priority growth engine. For the market, this sends a strong signal—it boosts confidence and enhances the overall business environment surrounding the marketplace.
ELETimes: Uttar Pradesh has also unveiled targeted initiatives at Electronica India and Productronica India 2026. What makes these events the right platform for such announcements?
Bhupinder Singh: The aim is to elevate engagement beyond generic networking and create structured access. These initiatives are designed to raise the signal-to-noise ratio and make engagement more purposeful:
- UP Electronics Leadership Summit: A closed-door gathering of 100+ CEOs to accelerate top-level partnership and investment conversations
- CM-Meet: An invite-only leadership roundtable to align on priorities and collaboration themes
- 1: 1 meeting with international companies: To foster and accelerate alliances, JVs and market-entry conversations.
- Startup Showcase: 20+ startups to connect innovation with adoption and manufacturing capability
ELETimes: How international is the 2026 edition—practically speaking?
Bhupinder Singh: You’ll see a genuinely global footprint—strong participation across Asia, Europe and the US—bringing better benchmarking and more partnership options. As we progress toward the event, we are building toward the planned scale of 400+ exhibitors from 20+ countries.
For visitors and exhibitors alike, this matters because international presence improves benchmarking, expands partnership options, and raises the standard of technical and commercial discussions.
ELETimes: What does “end-to-end ecosystem” actually translate to on the show floor?
Bhupinder Singh: It translates to a complete, decision-ready view of electronics manufacturing—where stakeholders can assess both upstream and downstream implications and qualify partners with confidence. That includes components and modules, SMT and assembly, automation, test and inspection, embedded hardware and connectivity, EMS capabilities, and the factory disciplines that protect yield and reliability—cleanroom readiness, ESD control, safety systems and process consistency. The point isn’t variety. The point is readiness because electronics outcomes are not driven by one technology choice—they are driven by how choices perform together across the production flow.
ELETimes: You also announced a significant milestone for India’s PCB ecosystem—BPCA 2026 in collaboration with ELCINA. What shift does this represent?
Bhupinder Singh: We’ve formally launched the next phase of BPCA 2026—Bharat’s dedicated platform for Printed Circuit Boards and Assemblies—in partnership with ELCINA (Electronic Industries Association of India). As part of this transition, the India PCB Tech Conference will be rebranded as the Bharat PCB Tech Conference, creating a stronger national platform aligned with global standards and manufacturing readiness. With BPCA joining Electronica India and Productronica India 2026, we are shaping a more focused, future-ready PCB ecosystem under one roof.
ELETimes: Where does the Bharat Electronics Yatra fit into the larger strategy?
Bhupinder Singh: The Yatra is about building market readiness before the event and expanding engagement beyond the venue. It takes the conversation directly to the clusters and decision-makers, captures on-ground perspectives, and drives awareness across the broader production chain. The outcome is better participation quality: a more informed audience, sharper buyer intent and a show floor aligned to real needs. It’s a pipeline builder, pulling the ecosystem in—focused on relevance and ensuring this trade forum remains connected to the market between editions.
ELETimes: Final message—what makes the April 2026 editions of electronica India 2026 and productronica India 2026 essential fixtures on every serious industry calendar?
Bhupinder Singh: Because India is no longer “next”—it is now. Capacity is expanding, standards are sharpening, and scale is accelerating faster than most markets can track. In such a cycle, advantage belongs to those who evaluate rigorously and secure the right partners early. electronica India and productronica India are designed as decision-grade marketplaces—where technologies are benchmarked live, and partnerships move swiftly from discussion to commitment. And in April 2026, Greater Noida is where market leaders go not just to get ahead—but to stay ahead.
The post India’s Electronics Powerplay: Why 2026 Will Lead the Way for the Industry appeared first on ELE Times.
OXIDE and Vexlum partner on high-power deep UV lasers for quantum computing and semiconductor manufacturing
Demystifying 3D ICs: A practical framework for heterogeneous integration

For decades, the semiconductor industry has relied on the relentless pursuit of Moore’s Law—the doubling of transistors on an IC every two years—to deliver ever-increasing performance and functionality. This traditional approach, primarily focused on scaling individual transistors and integrating more components onto a single, monolithic 2D die, has driven innovation across countless industries.
However, as we approach the physical limits of silicon, and the economic realities of advanced process nodes become increasingly prohibitive, the conventional path of monolithic scaling is facing significant roadblocks. Companies are encountering diminishing returns in terms of performance gains, escalating design and manufacturing costs, and challenges in integrating diverse functionalities onto a single chip without compromising yield or power efficiency.
In response to these growing pressures, a fundamental shift is occurring in chip design: the move toward 3D ICs and heterogeneous integration. This paradigm offers a compelling alternative, allowing companies to overcome the limitations of traditional 2D scaling by integrating multiple specialized chiplets—each potentially manufactured on different process technologies and optimized for specific tasks—into a single, advanced package.
Beyond raw performance, the shift to 3D IC offers benefits in design flexibility, manufacturing economics, and form factor by mixing dies manufactured on different process nodes. This modularity enables the use of cutting-edge processes only where absolutely necessary for performance, while leveraging more mature, cost-effective nodes for other functions. This approach also facilitates the creation of smaller, more integrated systems, crucial for devices where space is at a premium.
The unique challenges of advanced packaging
The shift to 3D IC advanced packaging isn’t without its complexities. Heterogeneous integration introduces a new set of design challenges that traditional monolithic approaches simply didn’t encounter. Existing design tools and methodologies are insufficient for the scale and complexity of heterogeneous integration.
With 3D IC design now featuring hundreds of thousands to millions of connections, it’s impractical to use manual methods like spreadsheets to manage the intricate connectivity and interactions between 3D layers.
3D IC designers also face the daunting task of managing a myriad of diverse IP and data formats. Source data for connectivity is supplied in a multitude of formats, including CSV files, LEF/DEF, GDS, Verilog RTL, and plain text files.
Integrating multi-vendor chiplets exacerbates the need for standardized, machine-readable design-models to ensure operability across different EDA tool design workflows. Furthermore, 3D IC designs typically include multiple dies from different foundries and processes, increasing the risk of failure and making them harder to identify and fix.
Because data is often dynamic, with updates received throughout the design process, incorporating new versions of design IP threatens to obliterate existing data, especially when IC and package designers work concurrently. So, designers must be able to accept input from various stakeholders—often designing their content concurrently—to create a design that is both electrically and physically correct.
Ensuring the integrity and functionality of these complex systems demands comprehensive system-level verification, not individual component checks. To truly harness the immense power of heterogeneous integration and confidently navigate these multifaceted challenges, a robust, systematic, and proven framework is not just beneficial—it’s foundational. Otherwise, without a clear roadmap, design teams risk costly iterations, delayed time-to-market, and sub-optimal product performance.
System technology co-optimization: The key to efficient 3D IC design
System technology co-optimization (STCO) is exactly that foundational framework: an advanced, holistic methodology that elevates optimization beyond the considerations of a single die. Instead of narrowly tuning devices at the wafer or chip level—a practice known as device technology co-optimization (DTCO)—STCO allows for the optimization of power, performance, area, cost, and reliability across various components as a unified whole, including silicon, packages, interposers, PCBs, and even mechanical components.
Thus, STCO provides the system-centric framework needed for organizations to stay ahead of the curve in 3D IC design, maximizing value, minimizing risk, and unlocking new levels of competitive differentiation.
STCO breaks down silos that historically separated silicon, package, and board design, and it leverages system-level analysis to guide critical decisions—such as chiplet partitioning, placement, interconnect planning, and assembly verification—early in the design flow. This integrated approach not only reveals downstream issues much sooner but also enables “shift-left” validation and optimization, preventing costly respins and delays.
The strategic benefits of STCO are profound for organizations embracing 3D IC design. Companies can realize shorter design cycles with fewer iterations and handoffs, thanks to continuous verification and ongoing feedback between domains.
Cross-functional teams—from system architects to packaging, DFT, and manufacturing engineers—can observe interdependencies and work together to resolve them proactively. This leads to faster time-to-market, improved first-pass yield, and the ability to confidently deliver innovative, heterogeneous products that meet aggressive performance requirements.
Mastering heterogeneous integration: Your expert guide
This is precisely where the Heterogeneous Integration eBook series becomes a handy guide. This eBook series doesn’t just describe the challenges, it provides a comprehensive, actionable methodology to overcome them.
This robust 10-step methodology for heterogeneous integration, formulated by author of this article, guides designers through the entire process: from the initial creation of the 3D digital twin and system-level planning to detailed design optimization, rigorous verification, and final sign-off. By following this methodology, designers are ensured a streamlined and predictable path to robust advanced package development.
Designers gain expert insights into building a complete digital model, optimizing physical layouts, ensuring robust verification, and preparing designs for successful manufacturing. The series is structured into four eBooks, each focusing on a critical stage of the heterogeneous integration journey—from initial 3D Digital Twin Creation and Assembly Floorplanning, through Scenario Completion, and finally to the crucial Signoff phase—empowering design teams with the knowledge and best practices to confidently lead the next wave of chip innovation.
If you’re ready to move beyond outdated methodologies and truly unlock the power of 3D IC and heterogeneous integration, now is the time to act. The Heterogeneous Integration eBook Series offers not just theory, but a proven framework to help conquer the formidable challenges of advanced packaging.
Don’t let complexity stand in the way—arm yourself with strategies for system-level optimization, cross-domain collaboration, and predictable first-pass success.
Keith Felton is marketing manager for Xpedition IC packaging solutions at Siemens EDA. Working extensively in IC package design since the late 1980s, Keith drove the launch of the industry’s first dedicated system-in-package design solution in the early 2000s and led the team that launched Siemens OSAT Alliance program.
Special Section: Chiplets Design
- What the special section on chiplets design has to offer
- Chiplet innovation isn’t waiting for perfect standards
- Scoping out the chiplet-based design flow
The post Demystifying 3D ICs: A practical framework for heterogeneous integration appeared first on EDN.
Renesas Launches First Bidirectional 650V-Class GaN Switch For Multiple Uses
Renesas Electronics Corporation, a premier supplier of advanced semiconductor solutions, unveiled the industry’s first bidirectional switch using depletion-mode (d-mode) GaN technology, capable of blocking both positive and negative currents in a single device with integrated DC blocking. Targeting single-stage solar microinverters, AI data centres, and onboard electric-vehicle chargers, the high-voltage TP65B110HRU dramatically simplifies power-converter designs. It replaces conventional back-to-back FET switches with a single low-loss, fast-switching, easy-to-drive device.
Single-Stage Topology Boosts Efficiency, Reduces Components
Today’s high-power conversion designs use unidirectional silicon or silicon carbide (SiC) switches, which block current in only one direction when in the off state. As a result, power conversion must be divided into stages with multiple switched bridge circuits. For example, a typical solar microinverter uses a four-switch full bridge to convert from DC to DC for the first stage, followed by a second stage to produce the final AC output to the grid. Even as the electronics industry moves toward more efficient single-stage converters, engineers must work around inherent switching limitations. Many of today’s single-stage designs use conventional unidirectional switches back-to-back, resulting in a fourfold increase in switch count and reduced efficiency.
Bidirectional GaN changes this landscape entirely. By integrating bidirectional blocking functionality on a single GaN product, power conversion can be achieved in a single stage using fewer switching devices. A typical solar microinverter, for example, will require only two high-voltage Renesas SuperGaN® bidirectional devices, eliminating the intermediary DC-link capacitors and cutting the switch count by half. In addition, GaN products switch fast, with low stored charge, enabling higher switching frequencies and higher power density. In a real-world single-stage solar microinverter implementation, the new GaN architecture demonstrated higher than 97.5 per cent power efficiency with the elimination of back-to-back connections and slow silicon switches.
Combining Robust Performance and Reliability with Silicon-Compatible Drivers
Renesas’ field-proven 650V SuperGaN devices are based on a proprietary normally-off technology that is simple to drive and highly robust. The TP65B110HRU combines a high-voltage bidirectional d-mode GaN chip co-packaged with two low-voltage silicon MOSFETs with high threshold voltage (3V), high gate margin (±20V), and built-in body diodes for efficient reverse conduction. Compared with enhancement-mode (e-mode) bidirectional GaN devices, the Renesas bidirectional GaN switch offers compatibility with standard gate drivers that require no negative gate bias. This translates to a simpler, lower-cost gate loop design and fast, stable switching in both soft and hard switching operation without a performance penalty. Power conversion topologies that require hard switching, such as the Vienna-style rectifier, can benefit from its high dv/dt capability of >100 V/ns, with minimum ringing and short delays during on/off transitions. The Renesas GaN device enables true bidirectional switching with high robustness, high performance and ease of use.
“Extending our SuperGaN technology to the bidirectional GaN platform marks a major shift in power conversion design norms,” said Rohan Samsi, Vice President, GaN Business Division at Renesas. “Customers can now achieve higher efficiency with fewer switching components, smaller PCB area and lower system cost. At the same time, they can accelerate design by leveraging Renesas’ system-level integration with gate drivers, controllers and power management ICs.”
Key features of the TP65B110HRU:
- ±650V continuous peak AC and DC rating, ±800V transient rating
- 2kV Human Body Model ESD protection rating (HBM and CDM)
- 110 mΩ typical RSS,ON @ 25⁰C
- 3V typical Vgs(th)
- No negative drive required
- ±20V maximum Vgs
- >100 V/ns dv/dt immunity
- 1.8V, VSS,FW freewheeling diode voltage-drop
- TOLT top-side cooled package with industry standard pin-out
The post Renesas Launches First Bidirectional 650V-Class GaN Switch For Multiple Uses appeared first on ELE Times.
AngstromIO, A small 9mm by 9mm devboard, barely bigger than a USB C connector
| AngstromIO is one of the smallest devboards out there, barely longer than a USB-C connector, based on the ATtiny1616 MCU (16kB flash). It comes with 2 Addressable RGB LEDs, and 2 GPIOs as well as I2C lines are broken out. I made a dual CH340 programming board too, both for UPDI programming and debugging (one way Serial Communication). (not related, but I also designed a breadboard friendly, experimentation board for the CH32V003, with a 5x4 charlieplexed LED matrix. This way I ordered all the designs on one PCB panel) The ATtiny1616 may not be the most powerful MCU, but it has really attractive advantages too: It's cheap (70 cents), comes in a small QFN20 package, doesn't need any external components, has excellent power consumption (200nA in PWR down mode), and can be programmed with the Arduino IDE, thanks to SpenceKonde megaTinyCore library (via UPDI) This devboard is minimalist, and I kept it simple, so it's applications might be limited (the USB C is only for power, no data), but I think it's a really cool tiny devboard for small projects where some basic logic is required (handling I2C sensors, getting a visual feedback (2x RGB LEDs), toggling GPIOs), but in a space constrained design, I'm thinking for example of using this board, like you would do with a USB-C PCB breakout board in a 3D enclosure: Instead of just providing 5V, it already comes with 2 LEDs, GPIOs and some computational power. The Programmer is an all in one module, that will make debugging with the Serial monitor while programming easy: one board for both. I hope you'll enjoy, and don't hesitate to check out the Github 😉 https://github.com/Dieu-de-l-elec/AngstromIO-devboard/tree/main [link] [comments] |



