Texas Instruments makes Wi-Fi technology more robust and affordable for connected IoT applications 

Texas Instruments (TI)  has introduced a SimpleLink family of Wi-Fi 6 companion integrated circuits (ICs) to help designers implement reliable, secure and efficient Wi-Fi connections at an affordable price for applications that operate in high-density or high-temperature environments up to 105 degrees C.

The first products in TI’s CC33xx family include devices for Wi-Fi 6 only or for Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth Low Energy 5.3 connectivity in a single IC. When attached to a microcontroller (MCU) or processor, the CC33xx devices are said to enable a secure Internet of Things (IoT) connection with reliable radio-frequency (RF) performance in broad industrial markets such as grid infrastructure, medical and building automation. 

Building on TI’s growing wireless connectivity portfolio, the SimpleLink CC3300 Wi-Fi 6 companion IC and CC3301 Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth Low Energy 5.3 companion IC start at US$1.60. The 2.4-GHz CC33xx devices are claimed to provide greater Wi-Fi network efficiency and a stable connection across more than 230 access points, while operating at temperatures from –40 degrees C to 105 degrees C. The devices also allow designers to connect their IoT edge nodes directly to home or enterprise access points without additional equipment.

The Wi-Fi 6 companion devices feature orthogonal frequency division multiple access (OFDMA) technology and basic service set (BSS) colouring to deliver fast and consistent network performance and connect more devices simultaneously, without interference from congestion. The devices support Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) security features, including the latest WPA3 cryptographic technologies for personal and enterprise networks and a secure boot feature with firmware authentication.

SimpleLink CC3300 and CC3301 Wi-Fi 6 companion ICs easily attach to TI and many other companies’ MCUs and processors that support Linux or real-time operating systems (RTOS). For example, CC33xx products easily attach to artificial intelligence (AI)-capable processors such as TI’s AM62A Arm Cortex-based vision processors, used in edge AI applications such as smart appliances and security cameras to reliably connect smart Wi-Fi-enabled devices to the cloud.

Industrial design engineers can incorporate TI’s CC3300 with host MCUs such as TI’s 2.4-GHz CC2652R7 SimpleLink multiprotocol wireless MCU or an AM243x MCU-hosted system to enable greater IoT flexibility with Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth LE 5.3, Thread, Zigbee 3.0 and Matter protocols.

Samples of the CC33xx companion ICs are available in a quad flat no-lead (QFN) package and start at US$1.60 in 1,000-unit quantities. A new, easy-to-use BP-CC3301 evaluation board is available for purchase for US$39. Volume production for the CC3300 and CC3301 is expected in the fourth quarter of 2023. TI is also developing pin-to-pin compatible, dual-band 2.4- and 5-GHz Wi-Fi 6 devices that will be available as samples later this year.

https://www.TI.com

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Keysight expands Novus portfolio with compact network test solution for automotive and industrial IoT

Keysight Technologies is expanding its Novus portfolio with the Novus mini, a network test platform in a compact form factor that addresses the needs of network engineers as they deploy automotive and industrial internet of things (IoT) devices.

As enterprises transition to Industry 4.0 business models to take advantage of digitalisation, their reliance on connected IoT devices becomes more important to business operations. Industries such as automotive and manufacturing can improve safety and efficiency by connecting IoT machines and sensors to business systems. However, system failures and downtime caused by connectivity and network issues can result in high-risk, life-threatening situations. To mitigate any potential problems, network engineers must fully test the connectivity and performance of network components and IoT devices before deploying them.

Keysight’s Novus mini addresses this need by giving network engineers a compact, quiet, and affordable platform to test the performance and conformance of their industrial networks. The Novus mini supports testing based on time-sensitive networking (TSN) standards, which is a critical safety component in IoT applications such as the advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) used in autonomous vehicles.

The Novus mini provides network testing value – a combined solution offering both traffic generation and protocol testing in a single platform. It is compact, quiet and affordable. It claims to feature the smallest footprint in the industry, outstanding cost per port, and ultra-quiet, fanless operation. It validates layers 2-3 by covering full performance and conformance testing.

The Novus mini tests critical timing standards for industrial IoT and supports full timing testing and automated time TSN for 802.1AS 2011/2020, 802.1Qbv, 802.1CB and 802.1Qci.

Ram Periakaruppan, vice-president and general manager, Network Test & Security Solutions, Keysight, said that the Novus mini provides real-world validation and automated conformance testing for leading edge technologies. 

As a member of the Avnu Alliance community, Keysight is working with other market leaders to advance Industry 4.0 by crafting essential standards for the next generation of IoT.

Keysight will be at Hannover Messe, 17-21 April 2023, Hall 14, Stand H06.

https://www.keysight.com

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Customisable RISC-V IP cores is fully customisable, says Semidynamics 

Claimed to be the first fully customisable 64-bit RISC-V family of cores to be able to handle the large amounts of data required for AI, machine learning and high performance computing (HPC), cores released by Semidynamics are process agnostic. Versions are available down to 5nm.

Customers can control the configuration, said Semidynamics, rather than having, configurations fixed by the vendor or with a limited number of configurable options such as cache size, address bus size, interfaces and a few other control parameters. The IP cores available from Semidynamics enable the customer to have control over the configuration, in terms of new instructions, separate address spaces or new memory accessing capabilities . “This means that we can precisely tailor a core to meet each project’s needs so there are no unrequired overheads or compromises,” said Roger Espasa, CEO and founder of Semidynamics. “Even more importantly, we can implement a customer’s ‘secret sauce’ features into the RTL in a matter of weeks,” he added. 

The first core, the Atrevido, is available for licensing now. It has out-of-order scheduling that is combined with the company’s proprietary Gazzillion technology. The core can handle highly sparse data with long latencies and with high bandwidth memory systems, typically found in today’s machine learning applications. According to Semidynamics, Gazzillion technology removes the latency issues that can occur when using CXL technology to enable far away memory to be accessed at supercharged rates.

The Gazzillion technology is specifically designed for recommendation systems that are a key part of data centre machine learning processes. By supporting over a hundred misses per core, an SoC design can deliver sparse data to the compute engines without a large silicon investment. In addition, the core can be configured from two- for four-way versions to help accelerate the not-so-parallel portions of recommendation systems.

For the most demanding workloads, such as HPC, the Atrevido core supports large memory capacities with its 64-bit native data path and 48-bit physical address paths. According to Espasa, these are the fastest cores on the market for moving large amounts of data with a cache line per clock at high frequencies “even when the data does not fit in the cache. And we can do that at frequencies up to 2.4Hz on the right node” making them suitable for applications streaming a lot of data and/or if the application touches very large data that does not fit in cache. Competing core IPs average one cache line over many cycles, he added.

MMU support means Atrevido is also Linux-ready including supporting cache-coherent, multi-processing environments from two to hundreds of cores. It is vector ready, supporting both the RISC-V Vector Specification 1.0 as well as the upcoming Semidynamics Open Vector interface. Vector instructions densely encode large numbers of computations to reduce the energy used by each operation. Vector Gather instructions support sparse tensor weights efficiently to help with machine learning workloads.

Espasa concluded, “No-one else has such a complex RISC-V core that can be totally configured to perfectly meet the specific needs of each project rather than having to use an off-the-shelf core and compromise.”

http://www.semidynamics.com

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Real-Time Innovations introduces observability framework 

To maximise the performance and availability of intelligent systems, Real-Time Innovations (RTI) has introduced the Connext Observability Framework which allows operators to identify, understand and prevent obstacles encountered during deployment.

The software for autonomous systems announced the latest addition to its Connext product suite featuring the Connext Observability Framework. The Observability Framework is believed to be the first for operational technology systems based on the DDS (Data Distribution Service) standard. 

According to Connext, developers and operators of mission-critical distributed applications such as in-hospital patient monitoring and remote vehicle operation will benefit from increased visibility into the health of deployed systems.

Autonomous applications require high reliability and real time performance that the underlying network may not always provide. The Observability Framework is the latest in the Connext Product Suite, offering visibility into systems’ run time behaviour, allowing potential problems to be identified before they impact the user. It also shortens the time required to diagnose and resolve issues when they do occur. This is particularly critical for systems deployed over networks that may be unreliable or have unpredictable bandwidth and latency, such as shared, wireless and public networks.

The Connext Observability Framework integrates with standard full stack observability components allowing developers to monitor Connext and non-Connext technologies with the same observability tools (including Prometheus for metrics storage, Grafana Loki for logs aggregation and Grafana dashboards for visualisation).

It allows users to monitor the performance and health of the distributed system from a holistic, centralised view and reduce system downtime by identifying and localising problems.

It also increases the quality and speed of design, development, testing and deployment through enhanced system verification and validation, said RTI.

Users can scale the observability telemetry pipeline as systems get more complex, added RTI.

“An increasing number of mission-critical applications are integrating autonomous capabilities. As these systems grow in scale and complexity, more data is exchanged leading to more dependence on unpredictable networks,” said David Barnett, vice president of product and markets at RTI. “We created the Connext Observability Framework so developers can have full confidence that their systems are working properly and that they can quickly diagnose and resolve issues when they are not. 

“From medical devices to autonomous vehicles, mobile defence systems and beyond, this is another example of RTI leading the charge to the software-defined future,” he added.

Systems that can benefit from the Observability Framework include patient monitoring in a hospital, in which networks may be shared with other applications and bandwidth can vary as patients move. It is also suitable for the operation of autonomous vehicles at a mining site and command, control and communication in mobile defence systems.

The Connext Observability Framework is available with Connext 7.1, the latest release of the Connext Product Suite. 

http://www.rti.com 

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