ARM Cortex-A8 Computer Board
The SBC1651, an ARM Cortex-A8 computer board from Micro/sys (Montrose, CA), features the Freescale Semiconductor i.MX515 CPU at its core and consumes minimal power while operating at 800 MHz. The onboard Stackable USB I/O expansion with USB, I2C and SPI provides access to plug-and-play off-the-shelf I/O boards with A/D, D/A, Zigbee, GPS, mass storage, sensors, and other embedded I/O for industrial measurement and control applications. Combined with a wide range of software operating systems, including WinCE, Linux, VxWorks, and Android, the SBC1651 is suitable for embedded systems designs or upgrading legacy X86 PC/104 systems. On the 104 Form Factor, the SBC1651 offers 512MB SDRAM, 2GB flash, and two SD/MMC card slots for portability and multimedia storage. It offers dual 10/100BASE-T Ethernet, seven serial ports, four USB ports (one On-The-Go). Additional onboard peripherals include a real-time clock, watchdog timer, 1-wire interface, 24 lines of discrete I/O, two PWM outputs, audio support TV out, 24-bit LVDS flat panel display output, 4-wire touchscreen interface, and a SATA HDD port.
For Free Info Click Here
Top Stories
INSIDERDesign
Venus Aerospace’s Rotating Detonation Rocket Engine Completes First Flight...
INSIDERDesign
Bombardier is Digitally Upgrading its Aircraft Design, Engineering and...
INSIDERDefense
How the US Army is Advancing Research in Robotics, AI and Autonomy
INSIDERManned Systems
New Copper Alloy Could Provide Breakthrough in Durability for Military Systems
Original EquipmentManned Systems
ACT Expo 2025: Heavy-Duty EVs, H2 Trucks and Tariff Talk Dominate Day One
Technology ReportPower
Webcasts
Defense
Soar to New Heights: Simulation-Driven Design for Safety in Electrified...
Software
Improving Signal and Power Integrity Performance in Automotive...
Aerospace
Transforming Quality Management with Data-Driven Analytics
Software
Enhancing Automotive Software Efficiency with vECU-based...
Aerospace
Precision Under Pressure: The Centerless Grinding Advantage in...
Photonics/Optics
Breaking Barriers in Space Communication with Optical Technology