NXP's EdgeReady MCU-based facial recognition solution leverages the i.MX RT106F crossover MCU to enable developers to quickly and easily add facial recognition with liveness detection capabilities to their products. Liveness detection prevents photo spoofing and is enabled by low-cost IR and RGB cameras. The solution’s development kit, SLN-VIZNLC-IOT, comes with fully integrated, turnkey software for rapid out-of-the-box operation, minimizing time to market, risk and development effort. Facial recognition is done entirely at the edge, solving many consumer privacy concerns. The NXP EdgeReady solution is part of the EdgeVerse™ edge computing platform.
Introduction: It is used for preliminary exploration and research of electromagnetic accelerators, aiming to realize the future transportation of magnetoresistive acceleration pipelines through underground pipelines in related logistics industries.
Idiotware Shield is a learning platform that can quickly implement hundreds of Arduino projects, whether you are a novice or an expert. The Idiotware Shield is the Swiss Army Knife of Arduino shields, with a host of integrated inputs and outputs and options for connectivity and expansion.
NetSoM is a family of open source, OpenWrt-powered system-on-module (SoM) kernels and the development boards that host them. Combined with our sample code base, these boards allow developers to go from scratch to mass production in record time. With support for Wi-Fi connectivity and two Ethernet phy ICs, it is soldered to a development board with two RJ-45 Ethernet ports. NetSoM is currently in production as an industrial LoRaWAN gateway solution, but it is widely applicable in areas as diverse as home automation, automotive networking, audiovisual data processing, and smart cities. As part of this project, we are releasing software for a variety of useful NetSoM applications. Among them are: an audio streaming (SIP telephony) application using the WM8960 codec, a video streaming (RTSP/MPEGTS) application using the OV5640 camera module, an Alexa-style speech recognition application, a UDP to CAN forwarding application, a LoRaWAN Gateway Application
The Conexio Stratus is a small (50.8mm x 22.86mm) yet powerful development kit for creating cellular connected electronics projects. It runs the best-in-class Zephyr RTOS for connected devices and is a battery-powered platform ideal for prototyping cellular IoT systems such as asset tracking applications, environmental monitoring, smart meter monitoring, and more. Equipped with Nordic nRF9160 System-in-Package (SiP), it supports LTE-M, NB-IoT and Global Positioning System (GPS). Stratus has two external U.FL antennas onboard, one for GPS and one for LTE-M/NB-IoT, enabling it to support LTE bands worldwide.
Newt is a battery-operated, always-on, wall-mounted display that can retrieve weather, calendars, sports scores, to-do lists, quotes...anything on the internet! It is powered by the ESP32-S2 microcontroller and you can program it using Arduino, CircuitPython, MicroPython or ESP-IDF. We think Newt is the next step in the evolution of low-power display panels. Sharp's Memory in Pixel (MiP) technology is ideal for manufacturers, avoiding the slow refresh times associated with E-Ink displays. To support timers and alarms, we also added a real-time clock (RTC). Finally, we designed the Newt with battery operation in mind—every component on the board was chosen for its ability to run with low power consumption.
This is what smart home enthusiasts want to control their entire lights, thermostat, or any other smart device from their couch without having to activate a wall switch.
Picoclick is a simple IoT button in a very small package. The size of the PCB is only 18x20mm, and the height with the 300909 battery is only about 10mm. It's able to connect to your local WiFi at an impressive speed of about 1.5 seconds on average. Yes, since it calls IOT-Button, it uses WiFi of course! This opens up countless possibilities for that little device.
The biggest highlight of this kit is Sony's own 6-core microcontroller CXD5602, which comes with 1.5MB of general-purpose SRAM, 64KB of backup SRAM, and a main frequency of 156MHz. There is also an M0+ core assist processor for IO control management, which comes with 256KB of general-purpose SRAM. The built-in GNSS receiver supports GPS and GLONASS. Others include 2D graphics acceleration (supporting rotation, scaling, mixing, etc.); dedicated sensor acquisition peripherals (with its own 40KB FIFO and supporting preprocessing) supporting SPI, I2C and other interface methods; DCMI camera interface and I2S audio peripherals All pretty good too.
The MAXREFDES9001 is a complete Internet-of-Things (IoT) security reference design featuring a LoRa radio based
Introduction: A minimal system development version based on nrf52832, which can be used to develop Bluetooth keyboards, etc.