10 Merry Circuits to Illuminate Your Holiday
http://makezine.com/2016/12/16/10-merry-circuits-to-illuminate-your-holiday/ →
http://makezine.com/2016/12/16/10-merry-circuits-to-illuminate-your-holiday/ →
https://blog.hackster.io/hacksters-handpicked-projects-of-the-week-ac54f34d1d5b#.vgglmnsi1 →
Amazon released in November 2016 a new AWS Greengrass service, which will expand Amazon’s reach in the direction of the cloud services to fog computing systems. AWS Green Grass allows the same IoT applications driving the cloud and locally embedded devices. Greengrass expands Amazon’s cloud services so that devices connected to the cloud can make →
http://www.cio.com/article/3117720/internet-of-things/samsung-brings-javascript-to-the-internet-of-things.html JavaScript can be used on small embedded devices like IoT nodes. →
http://electronicsforu.com/technology-trends/industrial-iot-iiot-will-require-embedded-hardware-security?utm_source=eotpage&utm_medium=eotpage&utm_campaign=eotpage&utm_content=eotposts Hardware security is needed in IIoT according to Maxim. →
http://electronicsofthings.com/news/products/riot-your-friend-for-the-iot/?utm_source=eotpage&utm_medium=eotpage&utm_campaign=eotpage&utm_content=eotposts Interesting looking IoT operating system. →
http://www.edn.com/electronics-blogs/about-embedded/4442702/Most-embedded-to-become-IoT?_mc=sm_edn&hootPostID=6b9853ea74f88c39aa6ff2c36543e5fe Most embedded devices will have connectivity in the future! →
https://fossbytes.com/nasa-coding-programming-rules-critical/ There is very strict ruleset how to write code at NASA. Those rules should suit embedded development. →
Google is working on a new operating system named Fuchsia: ‘Pink + Purple == Fuchsia (a new Operating System).’ At LinuxCon last year, Linus Torvalds said that the Linux kernel has grown so big that if someone wants a really tiny kernel they would have to look elsewhere. Maybe for this reason Google is developing →
Expressif has released a new WiFi chip. It is not that interesting ESP32 that I have written about earlier, and should be available soon. The new ESP8285 went into mass production in March. Hackaday article describes it as ESP8266-Killer, but I I think that this kind of headline is clickbaiting. What could possible make it →