When the first Raspberry Pi rolled off the production line back in 2012 it sported a 26-pin expansion header that seemed to conceal endless possibilities. A later upgrade to the 40-pin header we have ...
For both the Raspberry Pi and BeagleBone Black, there’s a lot of GPIO access that happens the way normal Unix systems do – by moving files around. Yes, for most applications you really don’t need ...
General purpose input-output (GPIO) pins are the simplest peripherals. The link to an object under control (OUC) may become inadvertently unreliable due to many reasons: a loss of contact, short ...
Available for pre-order at the time of writing, these take the form of the Badger, Tufty, and Blinky. These are E-Ink, IPS, ...
This paper provides a complete solution to the GPIO Verification for any SoC. GPIO interface is available in every ASIC. To avoid duplicate efforts and (save) time to verify the GPIO interface, we ...
For automotive SoCs, GPIO IP blocks are typically developed as Safety Element out of Context (SEooC) and delivered with a set of Assumptions of Use (AoUs). Any risk due to failure of the EE components ...
Your MCU/SoC today may have several options for GPIO connections: UART, SPI, I2C. But there are dozens of variations and kinds of GPIO interface protocols: you don’t have enough pins to provide all of ...
Editor's Note: The embedded Linux kernel already play a vital role in embedded systems and stands to grow in importance in serving the diverse requirements of the Internet of Things (IoT). In turn, ...
Can you have probably already heard of the Flipper Zero, a fantastic pocket device that I owe you to carry out a member of different packing penetration and testing tasks. But did you know it could be ...