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Microchip launches sub-$1, dual-core AVR microcontroller for functional safety applications

Several microcontroller vendors used the time around Embedded World 2025 to introduce some truly interesting devices. I’ve already written about the TI MSPM0 microcontroller family and the WCH CH570 microcontroller (see “TI says its MSPM0 is the world’s most teeny, tiny 32-bit microcontroller. It’s smaller than a grain of white rice and costs 16 cents.” and “A 10-cent RISC-V microcontroller from China? Why not?”), and now it’s Microchip’s turn with a new family of 8-bit AVR microcontrollers designed to help comply with advanced safety requirements including ASIL C and SIL 2.

Read More → "Microchip launches sub-$1, dual-core AVR microcontroller for functional safety applications"

AI-Based PCBA Machine Vision Solution Ensures Supply Chain Integrity

I wish you could visit me in Max’s World, where everything is bigger, brighter, and more colorful. The birds sing sweeter (and in harmony), the flowers are more fragrant, the butterflies are more brillacious—a neologism of brilliant and bodacious that I just invented—and the beer flows plentifully and cold. Most importantly, everyone is nice, kind, honorable, and trustworthy. No one would even dream of doing anything naughty.

Unfortunately, like you, I am forced to spend my waking hours in the real world where naughtiness is the order … Read More → "AI-Based PCBA Machine Vision Solution Ensures Supply Chain Integrity"

Everything You Wanted to Know About LFSRs (But Were Too Afraid to Ask)

I don’t really recall when I first ran across the concept of the binary. I think I must have been around six years old. I remember getting a lined pad and pencil and starting to capture the sequence: 0, 1, 10, 11, 100, 101, 110, 111, 1000… until I’d filled the entire pad. I also remember being surprised that I hadn’t “reached the end” of the binary count sequence (it was some time before I wrapped my brain around the fact that the integers [in any base] went on forever).

Similarly, I’ve been enthused by … Read More → "Everything You Wanted to Know About LFSRs (But Were Too Afraid to Ask)"

A 10-cent RISC-V microcontroller from China? Why not?

Just as I was finishing my previous article about a new TI microcontroller that was smaller than a grain of white rice and sold for 16 cents in thousand-unit quantities, I learned of another new microcontroller based on a proprietary implementation of the 32-bit RISC-V processor ISA that sells for 10 cents (presumably in volume). This new microcontroller from WCH, aka Nanjing Qinheng Microelectronics, a Chinese chip and IP vendor based in Nanjing, China. (“WCH” appears to be an abbreviation for “WinChipHead.”) The microcontroller is the WCH CH570, which has 12 Kbytes of on-chip SRAM and 240 Kbytes of Flash EEPROM … Read More → "A 10-cent RISC-V microcontroller from China? Why not?"

Quantum Simulations of New Materials for the 21st Century

We are surrounded by a multiplicity of materials, from metals and alloys to crystals, glasses, and ceramics; from polymers and plastics to organic and living-derived substances; and let’s not forget natural materials like stone and exotic materials like aerogel.

The amazing thing to me is that all these materials are formed from different combinations of the same small group of elements. For example, while living organisms and other objects can contain traces of many elements, a core group does the heavy lifting; only six elements—carbon (C), hydrogen (H), oxygen (O), nitrogen ( … Read More → "Quantum Simulations of New Materials for the 21st Century"

TI says its MSPM0 is the world’s most teeny, tiny 32-bit microcontroller. It’s smaller than a grain of white rice and costs 16 cents.

Today, I want to discuss the incredible shrinking microcontroller. Early microcontroller vendors packaged their offerings in 40-pin DIPs. They were physically small for what you got then, but huge now. These microcontrollers shared several common features: a lame and very proprietary 4- or 8-bit processor architecture designed more to fit on the die than to deliver much performance, a trivial amount of RAM (64 bytes, 128 bytes if you were lucky), and not much more EPROM (perhaps 1 or 2 Kbytes) to store code and permanent data. Even with such extremely limited features, these early microcontrollers ushered in a new era … Read More → "TI says its MSPM0 is the world’s most teeny, tiny 32-bit microcontroller. It’s smaller than a grain of white rice and costs 16 cents."

It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad 48V World

It seems that many of our electronic systems (communications, computing, automotive, industrial, etc.) are transitioning from 12V to 48V. How are you going to power yours? (Don’t worry, that’s a trick question because I’m about to expound, explicate, and elucidate like an Olympic champion.)

For some reason, I currently find the phrase “It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad 48V World” bouncing around my bonce. Since we’re already on the subject, the 1963 movie, Read More → "It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad 48V World"

Only the Most Epic Embedded Online Conference Ever!

The value of online (virtual) conferences is increasing in leaps and bounds as travel becomes more problematic and time is increasingly at a premium. Some of these events “stand proud in the crowd,” as it were. Allow me to expound, elucidate, and explicate. 

When it comes to embedded space (where no one can hear you scream), the virtual extravaganza on everybody’s lips is the Embedded Online Conference (EOC).

< … Read More → "Only the Most Epic Embedded Online Conference Ever!"

Microchip’s new $30 debugger fulfills Jack Ganssle’s prophecy from 30 years ago

Microchip didn’t become a leading microcontroller vendor by accident. The company built its PIC microcontroller business from nothing to significant market share over two decades by cultivating developers, starting with college undergraduates. The company did this by offering a broad product line, inexpensive tools, and plenty of support. Microchip’s latest offering, a programming and debugging tool that sells for less than $30, continues that winning strategy.

Despite having far too many words in its product name, the MPLAB PICkit Basic In-Circuit Debugger provides embedded developers with a combined debugger and programmer that … Read More → "Microchip’s new $30 debugger fulfills Jack Ganssle’s prophecy from 30 years ago"

Is Integral Mind’s Digital Enlightenment Platform a True Artificial General Intelligence (AGI)?

The more I learn, the more I realize how little I know. A lot of people (my dear old mother, for one) think I’m clever. One thing I do know is how wrong they are. I have known a lot of clever people in my time, so I have something to compare myself against, and I’m afraid I don’t come out well.

I’m sad to say that I never got to meet the English mathematician John Horton Conway, who was born on the 26th of December 1937 in Liverpool, England, … Read More → "Is Integral Mind’s Digital Enlightenment Platform a True Artificial General Intelligence (AGI)?"

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Nov 14, 2025
Exploring an AI-only world where digital minds build societies while humans lurk outside the looking glass....