Interesting Engineering on MSN
US firm creates ‘world’s smallest’ microcontroller that operates in extreme temperatures
US semiconductor firm Texas Instruments (TI) just revealed what it claims is “the world’s smallest microcontroller (MCU).” ...
As the world demands faster and better performance in every application, new memory technology is needed. Texas Instruments’ Ultra-Low-Power MSP430FRxx family of MCUs is the answer to that demand.
It’s generally pretty easy to spot a microcontroller on a PCB. There are clues aplenty: the more-or-less central location, the nearby crystal oscillator, the maze of supporting passives, and perhaps ...
Mouser Electronics has announced the availability of ROHM Semiconductor’s ML63Q25x series of microcontrollers (MCUs).
tom's Hardware on MSN
The ‘world’s smallest microcontroller’ measures just 1.38 mm² and costs 20 cents
Texas Instruments (TI) unveiled what it claims to be “the world's smallest microcontroller (MCU)” at Embedded World 2025. The ...
STMicroelectronics has introduced the STM32V8, a next-generation microcontroller (MCU) built on its most advanced 18nm ...
Texas Instruments (TI) unveiled the MSPM0C1104 at Embedded World 2025 in Nuremberg, Germany. This device is now the world's smallest microcontroller (MCU). Measuring just 1.38mm²—smaller than a black ...
NXP Semiconductors has introduced the S32K5 family of automotive microcontrollers (MCUs), marking the industry's first 16nm FinFET MCU with embedded magnetic RAM (MRAM). This new MCU family is ...
In this episode of MCU Wars, Ritesh Tyagi and Chris Anderson compare two 32-bit microcontrollers—the RX100 from Renesas, and the STM32 from STMicroelectronics. We chose these two devices because of ...
ST has just launched its most powerful STM32 microcontroller so far, with the STM32V8 family, the first equipped with a Cortex-M85 core (clocked at up to ...
People tend to stick with the microcontroller unit they are most familiar with. However, on-device Gen AI introduces resource ...
Chipmaker STMicroelectronics launched what it claimed was the industry’s first 18nm microcontroller for high-performance applications.
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