This Week in Electronics History: The 1st Microprocessor
EE Times Current19 Nov 2021

This Week in Electronics History: The 1st Microprocessor

On the Weekly Briefing podcast: Exactly 50 years ago, one of the most significant products in electronics history was introduced: the microprocessor. It was inevitable that someone would invent one. It was hardly inevitable that it would be Intel. The story of the first microprocessor.

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The State of Multi-Die: Insights and Customer Requirements

The State of Multi-Die: Insights and Customer Requirements

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Artificial Hearing: From Ear Drums to Tuning Forks

Artificial Hearing: From Ear Drums to Tuning Forks

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Accelerating Complex Analog IC Design: The Power of Early Reliability Verification

Accelerating Complex Analog IC Design: The Power of Early Reliability Verification

Today we’re talking about something that’s top-of-mind for a lot of you: closing the reliability gaps in increasingly complex analog and mixed-signal IC designs—and doing it earlier, faster, and more ...

28 Juli 202518min

Can Neuromorphic Be Low-Power, Reconfigurable, and Scalable?

Can Neuromorphic Be Low-Power, Reconfigurable, and Scalable?

Professor Gert Cauwenberghs has been working toward building brain-scale systems for decades. At the University of California San Diego, he’s now one of the leaders of the Neuromorphic Commons hub, al...

14 Juli 202550min

Event-Driven E-Skins Protect Both Robots and Humans

Event-Driven E-Skins Protect Both Robots and Humans

Professor Gordon Cheng builds humanoid robots that can feel their environment using artificial skin. In this episode of Brains and Machines, he talks to Dr. Sunny Bains of University College London ab...

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Event-Driven E-Skins Protect Both Robots and Humans

Event-Driven E-Skins Protect Both Robots and Humans

Professor Gordon Cheng builds humanoid robots that can feel their environment using artificial skin. In this episode of Brains and Machines, he talks to Dr. Sunny Bains of University College London ab...

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