12-reasons-why-5g-and-wireless-dominated-the-airways-in-2019

The first wave of 5G-enabled devices dominated 2019, including the Galaxy S10, OnePlus 7, and Huawei P30 among others. Major infrastructure improvements continued to be rolled-out.

But 5G wasn’t the only new wireless tech hitting the market. Other wireless activities, like Wi-Fi 6, also began to appear. Below are 12 of the editor’s top picks for 2019.

Image source: Qualcomm

Qualcomm has big plans for 5G in 2020

From photos to gaming and AI applications, the Snapdragon 765 and 865 are both focused on bringing 5G to consumers at all levels.

Qualcomm’s latest Snapdragon platforms are aimed squarely at bringing 5G devices to consumers next year.

certification mark, 5G, Wi-Fi 6

Image source: WiFi Alliance

How Wi-Fi 6 and 5G will transform factory automation

A key technology trend for automation and control in 2020 and beyond is the emergence of wireless communications including 5G, Wi-Fi 6, LoRaWAN and more. An obvious benefit for factory automation is the use of wireless communication for remote monitoring and remote operation of physical assets but an equally important benefit is an ability to replace cables, unreliable WiFi and the many industrial standards in use today.

Image source: Veo Robotics

FreeMove turns any industrial robot into a cobot

Veo Robotics’ FreeMove platform gives standard industrial robots the ability to function as collaborative robots that work alongside human workers. Don’t get rid of your old industrial robot yet. You may be able to upgrade it into a collaborative robot.

Image source: Beckstrom.com

What are Beckstrom’s Laws of Cyber Security?

Prioritizing security efforts – critical for the IoT to survive – may best be done by considering the value of transactions over the size of the network.

The Internet of Things (IoT) has many defining characteristics, such as tiny, cheap and low power sensors, embedded computers, and connectivity. But one characteristic will rule them all, namely, security. In the very near future, the IoT will probably not exist if it isn’t secure.

5G, 5G networks, automation and control, industrial application, factories
Image source: Design News

5G May Soon Explode with New Factory Functionality

Just as the iPhone ushered in a new world of consumer connectivity, the ultra-fast 5G networking may jump-start new industrial capabilities.

Speedy 5G networking is beginning to show up; in some places it is already a reality. While we know it will speed up consumer applications such as streaming or downloads – like a movie in seconds – what will it mean for industrial settings? At a session at the Design and Manufacturing Minneapolis show last week, Joshua Ness, senior manager of 5G Labs at Verizon, explained the coming impact of 5G during his session, Prepping for the 5G Factory.

smart textiles, sensors, wearable technology, National University of Singapore, sensor networks, IoT
Image source: NUS

Smart’ Textiles Boost Data Connectivity Between Sensors for Wearable Tech

A new textile network of sensors can provide the basis for intelligent wearable technology with unprecedented communication capability.

Image source: AiFi MWCLA, Design News


AiFi Replaces Cashiers and Checkouts with AI

Walk in, get what you need, and walk out. AiFi uses AI to completely automate and streamline the shopping experience.

Imagine walking into a grocery store, picking up all the items you need, and walking right out the door. No need for a cashier or even a self-checkout, the store will automatically charge everything you take to your credit card.

Image source: WMG at the University of Warwick

A European University is Testing 5G for Self-Driving Vehicles

The University of Warwick, in collaboration with NI, will be conducting tests of 5G-enabled services for autonomous and connected vehicles.

Edge Devices, MQTT, IIoT Connectivity, MOXA, MQTT, AMQP, CoAP, broker/client design

Image source: MOXA

Edge Devices Leverage MQTT for IIoT Connectivity

The MQTT transport protocol has emerged as a top choice for implementing IoT connectivity, offering solutions using local gateways or direct to the cloud.

A primary challenge for IIoT automation and control applications is the ability to efficiently and effectively collect the data that becomes the grist for IoT enterprise-level, decision making and analytics. And while a wide variety and different types of edge devices have been introduced, a major concern is how to collect data from these devices.

Image source: Molex

The 4 Major Challenges of Wireless In-Vehicle Charging

Wireless charging is the best way for automakers to meet consumer demand for better charging performance in their vehicles. But there significant challenges to getting this innovation to market.

Today’s consumer expects to be connected via their mobile device wherever they go – especially in their vehicles, which have become more than transportation; they are a mobile extension of the owner’s living space.

Image source: LoRa Alliance

Everything You Need to Know about LoRa and the IoT

A guide to LoRa / LoRAWAN, the communications technology emerging as the leader among Low-Power Wide-Area Networks (LPWANs) entering the IoT space.

We’re entering a world in which WiFi and Bluetooth may no longer be the best communication technologies for Internet of Things (IoT) applications. The IoT is gaining more ground each year. Experts project there will be 75 billion connected devices by 2025.

Ethernet, edge computing, IEEE, standards, IoT, Ethernet, DeviceNet, EtherNet/IP

Image Source: ODVA

Ethernet at the Device-Level

IoT-drive technology standards are creating new possibilities for reducing the cost and complexity of integrating Industrial Ethernet into constrained networks and devices.

John Blyler is a Design News senior editor, covering the electronics and advanced manufacturing spaces. With a BS in Engineering Physics and an MS in Electrical Engineering, he has years of hardware-software-network systems experience as an editor and engineer within the advanced manufacturing, IoT and semiconductor industries. John has co-authored books related to system engineering and electronics for IEEE, Wiley, and Elsevier.

the-top-consumer-electronic-articles-of-2019

According to Statista, the consumer electronics industry is expected to grow by around 2.2 percent between 2018 and 2019. While this rate is significantly less than in previous years, it still shows a strong upward trend. 

Design News covered all of the leading growth areas in both consumer electronics and product manufacturing trends. Below are 12 of the editor’s top picks for 2019.

Image: Vectorfusionart/Adobe Stock

Which companies were naughty—and which were nice—in 2019?

It’s time to draft the naughty and nice lists for 2019 and see which companies deserve to be rewarded and which ones will get a lump of coal in their stocking.

printed circuits, Linköping University, RISE, Research Institutes of Sweden, Campus Norrköping, organic transistors

Image source: Thor Balkhed

Complete integrated circuits fabricated using printing press

The breakthrough eliminates the need to use multiple manufacturing methods to create an integrated circuit with more than 100 organic transistors.

Image Source: Adam Traidman, Turkey

What does every engineer want for the holidays?

Skip the presents and go for the (engineering) experience.

During the holiday season, one tends to think of presents. But today’s designers, manufacturers and sellers tell us the product is but a commodity and what we really want is the experience.

10 Technologies That Can Make You Into a Superhero

There are technologies that exist today that aren’t far off from what you’ve seen in superhero movies and comic books.

digital twin, Altair, physics-based testing, simulation testing, crash test dummies

Image source: Altair

Save Your Crash Test Dummy

The blend of physics-based testing and data-based simulation has an impressive impact on the ability to shorten the time-to-market of new designs. Add simulation, but don’t throw away the dummy.

Image Source: Netflix

8 Popular Products You Didn’t Know Were Built with Open Source

A popular streaming service, video games consoles, and mobile messaging all owe a debt to FreeBSD.

Image Source: Cisco

The 7 Best LoRaWAN Devices on the Market

Whether you’re building a DIY project, or attempting to manufacture something for market, there are ready-made LoRaWAN gateway products to support your efforts.

New Material Could Transform How Electronics Are Built

A new family of crystal materials can serve a dual purpose in electron movement in electronic devices, potentially changing how they will be designed in the future.

Image source: Clarke Lab/Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences

Method for Soft Actuation Eyed for New Devices, Robots

A new method for actuation can change the shape of a flat sheet of elastomer with rapid and reversible action for new designs in robotics and other applications.

Image source: NürnbergMesse

3 Trends from Embedded World 2019

Embedded World revealed a number of trends that we can expect to see in the mass markets over the next six months to two years.

e-bandage

Image source: UW/Sam Million-Weaver

Electronic Bandage Can Speed Wound Healing 

An e-bandage dramatically speeds wound-healing using electrical energy harvested from a patient’s body.

smart textile

(Image source: The Laboratory of Monica Craciun, University of Exeter)

Graphene-Based Electronic Fibers for Wearable Textiles

Graphene could be used to incorporate electronics directly into fabric for next-generation smart textiles.

John Blyler is a Design News senior editor, covering the electronics and advanced manufacturing spaces. With a BS in Engineering Physics and an MS in Electrical Engineering, he has years of hardware-software-network systems experience as an editor and engineer within the advanced manufacturing, IoT and semiconductor industries. John has co-authored books related to system engineering and electronics for IEEE, Wiley, and Elsevier.

liberty-defense's-radar-can-detect-undetectable-ghost-guns
Hexwave can detect guns and other dangerous items on people in real time and at a walking pace. (Image source: Liberty Defense)

On the day of his 16th birthday, Nathaniel Berhow, a student at Saugus High School in Santa Clarita, Calif., shot and killed two of his classmates and wounded three others. The tragedy mirrored so many others that have been happening all over the US at an alarming rate in recent years. But one particular detail of the .45 caliber handgun Berhow used in the shooting caught the attention of law enforcement and media.

The gun was a “ghost gun,”so-called because it contained no serial number – making it difficult, if not impossible, to be traced by law enforcement. Ghost gun parts can even come from multiple sources further muddying the the chain of custody for law enforcement.

The gun was assembled from a kit of parts purchased online. Sellers of such kits argue that since they are only selling gun component rather than fully assembled firearms, they are legally in the clear.

Ghost guns can even be assembled using 3D-printed parts, printed by a seller or by the buyer in their own home. Files to print gun parts are readily available on the Internet and their legality is the subject of an ongoing legislative debate.

The modular nature of these guns, as well as their plastic components, also means it can be easy to sneak them past metal detectors.

The Saugus High School shooting was only the latest in a series of increasingly high-profile incidents involving ghost guns. But while law enforcement and government agencies are grappling with legislating and tracing ghost guns and 3D-printed guns, other groups and companies are working on the ground level to develop technologies to make these firearms easier to detect.

One such company is Vancouver, British Columbia-based Liberty Defense, a spin-off from MIT’s Lincoln Lab. Liberty Defense has developed a technology it calls Hexwave that combines machine learning and computer vision with an array of radar antennas to detect weapons regardless of their material composition. The goal is to augment existing security systems in airports, malls, stadiums, and other public spaces with a mobile system capable of detecting not only concealed weapons, but bullets, magazines, explosives, and even larger weapon components as well.

3D Printed Gun
A 3D-printed firearm, called “The Liberator,” made nearly entirely of plastic printed parts.

(Image source: Defense Distributed)

Bill Riker, CEO of Liberty Defense, told Design News that Hexwave is aimed at detecting weapons and other articles in dynamic, urban environments – places more chaotic and unpredictable than the queues at airports.

“In the airports and other places, it’s a very rigorous and effective process, but it takes a long time. And you’ve got a very captured audience,” Riker said. “In the urban environment – schools, stadiums, and malls – you’ve got a much less controlled environment, but you have an equally growing need for security.”

Riker said Liberty Defense’s technology allows for both indoor and outdoor detection zones, which is “important because of the need to be able to accommodate a layered defense when you are really trying to buy time for a security operation to proactively prevent a weapon from coming into a facility.” Hexwave can also be deployed covertly via kiosks or other means such as being hidden in walls.

Riker, who has over 35 years of experience working in security systems with Smiths Detention, DRS Technologies, General Dynamics, and the U.S. Department of Defense, likens Hexwave’s sensor technology to an insect’s eye – where a number of eyelets function together as one unit. Here, instead of eyelets, an array of low-frequency radar antennas (200 times lower power than Wi-Fi, according to the company) creates a three-dimensional point cloud of a person – capturing over 400,000 data points, according to Liberty Defense. “Think about it like a child’s coloring book. You’re connecting all the dots, except it’s in three dimensions,” Riker said.

“Part of the great work that MIT did here was to craft a design that can create multiple transmit and receive antennas,” Riker explained. “Typically, an antenna array has its transmitting and receiving off the same dish. This array actually separates them and you’re able to have essentially a multistatic display configured into a monostatic display.”

That point cloud is then converted into an image that a deep learning neural network analyzes to look for weapons and suspicious objects – all done in real time.

“We teach [the AI] a whole different series of weapons and as new weapons occur, we teach it and then we send that out by Wi-Fi into all the different systems to update them on a regular basis,” Riker said. “What’s important here is you don’t have to go from the cloud to a lookup table. All the analysis is done on the unit, therefore it’s super fast.”

Rather than distinguishing specific models or types of guns, what Hexwave looks for is identifiable shapes. “At this point, it’s general, but we can tell the difference between a plastic handgun and a metal metal handgun,” Riker said. “You can see if it’s a revolver or if it’s a semiautomatic pistol. You can also see explosives, including pyrotechnics. In that case you can actually you see the accelerates within the container.”

He continued. “There are all kinds of high-strength polymers that you can build 3D-printed guns out of. We can see that because it’s got a physical form to it, meaning, regardless of the material, there’s going to be some degree of reflectivity there. And so when you’re emitting energy against it that’s going to have a return that gives you that three-dimensional look.”

Once the AI has made its analysis, it can notify a human guard using a tablet. Riker said Hexwave can also be implemented into security systems to control things like door lock systems, video management systems, and command and control in cases where an immediate response is needed.

Hexwave uses an array of antennas to create a 3D point cloud image of people that pass by its towers. (Image source: Liberty Defense)

Liberty Defense says about 1,000 people can pass through a Hexwave-enabled security post. But there are limitations in terms of queuing people through the system. Entrance ways in typical stores, malls, and even schools can be chaotic – with lots of people entering and existing simultaneously in clusters. Hexwave requires each person be scanned one and a time – which means single file lines.

“The radar or the the energy we’re using is non-ionizing. So we’re out of the x-ray side, past millimeter wave, and into a different area,” Riker said. “And so what ends up occurring here is you can’t see through people. But, quite frankly, you can’t see through multiple people with x-ray systems either.”

Riker said the Hexwave system does offer an increased throughput over typical security stations and metal detectors – as well as more accuracy for security personnel – that Liberty Defense believes will ease any burden by requiring people to line up.

“So you get your increased throughput from two things really: Number one, you’re passing through at a walking pace and you typically should not have to divest of your typical articles on your body like a cell phone, a set of keys, or something like that. And then that’s also when it does identify something that’s either a known threat, clearly not a threat, or as an anomaly.

“Let’s say there’s an odd shaped object on you that’s really big that may look like a bar of soap. Why are you carrying a bar of soap on you? That’s kind of an odd thing to have, so the system will say something’s wrong here. It’s an anomaly. But the system also shows where that object is on your body so that a security official can go ahead and say, ‘Okay, please step over here for a second; what is that in your back pocket?’ ”

The real time speed of the system also offers an advantage over systems such as what the public may be used to in airports, for example.

“The airports do a great job. The technology is very effective. Airport scanners or the body scanners are typically using a four-millimeter wave and they are creating an image. It’s just that it’s not in real time. The reason why you can’t have little kids go through it is not because of the emission level. It’s because the kids typically can’t stay still. If you move ,you blur the image.

“For our system, it’s capturing the images several times a second. Little kids, adults, everyone can just keep walking through,” Riker said.

This anomaly detection feature becomes particularly important as criminals will often find ways around any new security system given enough time and experience. Different facilities can instruct the system to flag certain large items that shouldn’t be carried in (think large bags at sports stadiums) and human guards can intervene if something like a radar jammer or scrambler causes interference in the system. “If you’ve got a handgun or something like that in a radar-proof bag, it’s going to see a big bag on your body, flag the anomaly, and trigger the subsequent inspection,” Riker said.

In April 2019, Liberty Defense was granted an experimental license by the FCC to begin testing Hexwave. The company is planning to roll out beta tests in first half of 2020. As of writing 11 site have agreed to participate including Rogers Arena in Vancouver, the University of Wisconsin, and the Virginia state capital building in Richmond, VA. Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes has committed to testing Hexwave in his state. And the Maryland Stadium Authority will be testing the technology in various sporting venues.

Under federal law all firearms must be able to be detected by a metal detector, and all major components must be detectable by x-ray. The Undetectable Firearms Act of 1988 requires guns to be detectable by metal detectors even “after removal of grips, stocks, and magazines,” and the barrel, the slide or cylinder, or the frame or receiver must be detectable by x-ray.

However, the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence cautions: “The Undetectable Firearms Act does not specify what portion of the firearm must be detectable by a metal detector. This could allow an individual to create a mostly plastic but technically compliant firearm, using a 3D printer or other technology, that contains metal in an extraneous part of the firearm that could be removed prior to entering a security area.”

Riker said Liberty Defense is hoping to provide the public with a degree of safety and peace of mind that legislation hasn’t been able to. “That peace of mind seems to be eroding right now. So there’s a great potential to help recover that in our society,” he said. “I think we’re pretty confident that we’ll be able to stay ahead of the threat curve”

Chris Wiltz is a Senior Editor at  Design News covering emerging technologies including AI, VR/AR, blockchain, and robotics.

DesignCon 2020 25th anniversary Logo

January 28-30: North America’s largest chip, board, and systems event, DesignCon, returns to Silicon Valley for its 25th year! The premier educational conference and technology exhibition, this three-day event brings together the brightest minds across the high-speed communications and semiconductor industries, who are looking to engineer the technology of tomorrow. DesignCon is your rocket to the future. Ready to come aboard? 

Register to attend!

19-in-2019:-best-electronic-bits-from-the-design-news-vault

Check out the best curated technical content from the editors at Design News.

For electronic developers, 2019 was another stellar year. In addition to ongoing challenges and successes in areas such as embedded systems, hardware chips-board systems and system-of-systems (like satellites), there were new materials, evolving design approaches and insights to be considered. Here are the best stories that covered these issues from the 2019 Design News arhives.

  1. Top 10 2019 engineering, science and technology awards – Each year reveals further advances in the disciplines of technology, engineering and science. This year, luminaries were awarded for their work in cosmology, photonics, GPS systems, video processing, semiconductors, brain neurons and more.
  2. Who’s left to make chip development tools? –Electronic design automation (EDA) are the software tools used for designing electronic systems, such as system-on-chip (SoC) integrated circuits and printed circuit boards. The tools work in a design-verification flow that chip designers use to analyze and develop semiconductor chips. Here’s a look at the remaining major EDA tool companies after years of consolidation.
  3. Complete integrated circuits fabricated using printing press – Researchers have for the first time printed complete integrated circuits that have more than 100 organic transistors, a breakthrough in the quest to use printing to create complex next-generation electronic and computing devices. The breakthrough eliminates the need to use multiple manufacturing methods to create an integrated circuit with more than 100 organic transistors.
  4. 2 game-changing trends that will define embedded systems in the 2020s – The last decade has seen an amazing advancement in embedded system development techniques, tools and technologies. The next decade has the potential to dramatically change the way that products and embedded systems are developed.
  5. Developing an embedded software build pipeline – One interesting fact that I’ve noticed about embedded software development is that development processes and techniques tend to lag the general software industry. Developing a more sophisticated build pipeline can have dramatic effects on the embedded software development life cycle.
  6. 8 criteria to evaluate when selecting an RTOS – Real-time operating systems (RTOS) are finding their way into nearly two-thirds of all applications. Cost is a factor. But there are more important things to consider when choosing a real-time operating system.
  7. Old 3G battle shifts to 5G struggle – The old 3G battle between communication and computational industries has been replaced with the 5G struggle between nations and sub-6 vs mmWave global spectrums.
  8. Internet of Space or Space Junk?– When bad movies make good predictions and how to lessen the Kessler Syndrome with everything from AI to space harpoons.
  9. Did Edison Really Lose a Non-Existent ‘Current War?’ – The recent movie, The Current War, dramatizes the struggles between Edison, Westinghouse, and Tesla to bring electrical power to the US. But was the “war” actually fabricated?
  10. 3 Do’s and Don’ts for Medical Device Software Development – Medical devices are one of the fastest growing areas of embedded hardware and software development. Here are some successful strategies – and potential pitfalls – gleaned from real-world medical device development projects.
  11. Microorganisms Provide Solar Energy Independent of Using Solar Cells – The concept of solar energy usually inspires images of long rows of solar panels lined up in a vast field. Researchers in Sweden achieved production-potential amounts of butanol using carbon dioxide and sunlight
  12. Beware the Hidden Costs of a Free Embedded RTOS – If you’re basing your selection of a real-time operating system (RTOS) solely on initial cost, then you may be in for a rude awakening.
  13. 8 RISC-V Companies to Watch – The open source nature of RISC-V promises to enable companies to create custom chip hardware specifically tailored to their products and devices. These eight companies are developing their own RISC-V technologies and are committing to helping third parties do the same to help push adoption of the open-source chip architecture. April 2019
  14. New Material Could Transform How Electronics Are Built – A new family of crystal materials can serve a dual purpose in electron movement in electronic devices, potentially changing how they will be designed in the future.
  15. Biocompatible Transistor Invented for New Devices – Researchers have developed what they said is the first biocompatible ion-driven transistor fast enough to enable real-time signal sensing and stimulation of brain signals.
  16. Efficient Fabrication Method Achieved for Nano-Sized Processors – A new rapid fabrication method for nano-scale semiconductors could help advance the design of next-generation processors.
  17. The Biggest Embedded Software Issue Is … – There are many different problems and challenges that embedded software developers are facing today. One of the biggest and least spoken about issues is that too many developers are writing software code without considering what could go wrong.
  18. Smart Manufacturing Expert Says It’s Time to Embrace Fuzziness – Combining fuzzy sensing technologies with artificial intelligence, manufacturers can learn more about their enterprise for less cost.
  19. 2019 Will Be the Year of Open Source – After decades of being looked at as more of a subculture (or arguably counter-culture) in the larger technology landscape, open source is finally getting its due. From software and even hardware, we saw more activity in open source than ever before in 2018. 

John Blyler is a Design News senior editor, covering the electronics and advanced manufacturing spaces. With a BS in Engineering Physics and an MS in Electrical Engineering, he has years of hardware-software-network systems experience as an editor and engineer within the advanced manufacturing, IoT and semiconductor industries. John has co-authored books related to system engineering and electronics for IEEE, Wiley, and Elsevier.

best-ai-stories-of-2019
(Image source: Adobe Stock)

We’ve picked our favorite AI-related stories from 2019.

The 10 greatest issues AI needs to face

While we celebrate the positive impacts of artificial intelligence let’s not forget there’s also a lot to be concerned about.

The Apple Card Is the Most High-Profile Case of AI Bias Yet

Apple Card users have alleged that its credit decision algorithm discriminates against women.

How AI at the Edge Is Defining Next-Generation Hardware Platforms

Moving AI from the cloud to the edge was a big trend in 2019. Chris Cheng, distinguished technologist on the hardware machine learning team at Hewlett Packard, takes a look at some of the latest research being done on AI inference at the edge.

(Image source: OpenAI)

OpenAI’s Robot Hand Taught Itself How to Solve a Rubik’s Cube

Rubik’s Cube Solving Robot Hand Sparks Debate in the AI Community

Using novel neural networks, OpenAI enabled a robotic hand is able to learn how to solve a Rubik’s Cube on its own. Concerns regarding OpenAI’s robot hand that can solve a Rubik’s Cube have created a debate among engineers and AI experts on social media.

What’s the State of Emotional AI?

Artificial intelligence that can recognize human emotions – emotional AI – has been gaining momentum. But something’s missing. How long until we’ll be seeing it in our devices and cars?

(Image source: TuSimple)

UPS Has Invested in Autonomous Trucks After Ongoing Tests

TuSimple’s Autonomous Trucks Are Being Tested by the USPS

In 2019, TuSimple entered into partnerships with UPS and the US Postal Service to test self-driving trucks for hauling mail freight.

The New Raspberry Pi 4 Is All About AI and Embedded IoT

The Raspberry Pi has grown from a hobbyist machine to an IoT developer platform capable of even handling machine learning applications. Here’s our hands-on look.

A Look at the US/China Battle for AI Leadership

The US and China are waging a behind-the-scenes war over who will emerge as the global powerhouse of artificial intelligence. Where do each country’s strengths and weaknesses lie?

There’s a Diversity Crisis in the AI Industry

A lack of racial and gender diversity at the companies creating AI ties closely with issues of bias and racial discrimination in artificial intelligence algorithms, according to a new NYU study.

(Image source: Pixabay)

Can Trump’s New Initiative Make American AI Great Again?

A look at President Trump’s executive order aimed at accelerating America’s lead in artificial intelligence.

AI Could Make Quantum Computers a Reality

New research is examining the use of artificial intelligence to handle the calculations necessary for quantum computers to function.

the-history-and-future-of-the-bci

Mindflex, from Mattel and NeuroSky, used brainwaves to control a series of fans to navigate a floating ball through an obstacle course. (Image source: NeuroSky)

Remember about five years ago when several consumer headsets from NeuroSky and Emotiv were pitched as a computer game controllers? For example, NeuroSky promoted its EEG Headset as a training aid for young padawans to focus their minds through various exercises so they could control the movement of tablet-projected holograms. Based upon the wearer’s focus and concentration, the brainwave sensors on the EEG headset would allow them to interact with an application on a table.

NeuroSky and others (most notably, Emotiv) have created EEG headsets for gaming, neurological rehabilitation, and other applications. These headsets are examples of brain computer interface (BCI) technology – a computer-based system that acquires brain signals, analyzes them, and translates them into commands that are relayed to an output device like a computer, game console, medical prosthetic, or similar devices.

A BCI doesn’t actually read thoughts but rather detects the smallest of changes in the energy radiated by the brain when you think in a certain way. A BCI recognizes specific energy/frequency patterns in the brain. Some believe that the combination of humans and technology could be more powerful than artificial intelligence (AI) alone. For example, instead of relying on human perception and reasoning, one could use neurotechnologies to improve our perception, as in the case of interpreting a blurry security camera image before deciding whether to take action.

In the future, perhaps the carbon-based mind will connect directly with silicon-based artificial intelligence, robots, and other minds through BCI technologies to greatly extend our existing senses or maybe add new ones.

In order to appreciate what BCI technologies have to offer, it helps to understand a bit of their history.

Infographic – History of Brain Computer Interface (BCI) Tech

John Blyler is a Design News senior editor, covering the electronics and advanced manufacturing spaces. With a BS in Engineering Physics and an MS in Electrical Engineering, he has years of hardware-software-network systems experience as an editor and engineer within the advanced manufacturing, IoT and semiconductor industries. John has co-authored books related to system engineering and electronics for IEEE, Wiley, and Elsevier

5-trends-that-will-guide-automotive-technology-in-2020

Here are five trends that will be playing a key role in making cars safer and more efficient in the years to come.

  • Auto manufacturers have no option other than to realign their strategies in order to accommodate the looming revolution. Connected and electric cars are already on our roads. And the reality of fully-autonomous cars is coming closer and closer. Technology is helping auto companies to not only modernize their manufacturing processes but also to gather, manage, and analyze data. There’s also tons of data being generated by vehicles themselves All of this data will soon be the guiding factor for the automotive industry going forward.

    Here are five trends that will be playing a key role in making rides smoother, safer, and more efficient.

  • cybersecurity, automotive, MCU, networks, infotainment system

    1.) Vehicle VPNs and automotive cybersecurity

    We might not quite be there yet, but we are for sure on the verge of completely adopting autonomous vehicles. There has been a lot of talk surrounding self-driven vehicles, especially in regard to their safety and security. But the promise of connected and autonomous vehilces, and vehicle-to-everything (V2X) communcation, also opens up new avenues for hackers to attack our cars.

    Virtual Private Networks (VPNs), which allow users to create secure and private connections across even public networks, have been around for some time now. They even allow you to appear online as if you’re in another country. They have been successfully deployed by consumers and businesses as well as in many high-risk cybersecurity situations, including safeguarding government data.

    With the rise of connected vehicles, it is now clear that car owners and manufacturers are going to be adopting VPNs and other cybersecurity solutions to protect their connected and autonomous cars from cybersecurity threats.

    (Image source: Microchip Technology)

  • 2.) Multimodal mobility

    New options like ridesharing, e-scooters, and electric bikes are transforming the way we think about transportation. Powerful tools have made Big Data collection and analysis seamless. When this data is harnessed under a public-private partnership, it starts to bring flexible, multimodal mobility solutions to life. We are already witnessing this partnership change the travel and tourism industry through white-label journey planning apps. Going forward, urban transportation will get more efficient, streamlined, and, in the long run, sustainable thanks to the adoption of multimodal mobility.

    (Image source: VeoRide)

  • 3.) AI that understands drivers and passengers

    Real-time Big Data analysis enables vehicles to recognize user preferences and automatically adjust their settings in order to make rides more comfortable and customized. Image recognition and processing technologies are also being integrated into cars as a way of training vehicles to identify their owners and users without the need of car keys. Systems like the one being developed by Affectiva can even recognize the emotional states of drivers and passengers. Deep learning is already helping fleet operators monitor drivers remotely. Farther into the future, AI and brain-to-vehicle technologies will also be instrumental in the actualization of driverless car technology.

    (Image source: Affectiva)

  • 4.) Vehicle-to-everything (V2X) communication

    Decision making in our roads is now based on real-time, accurate, and well-analyzed data thanks to the Internet of Things (IoT). V2X technology is bringing connected cars to our roads that will have the ability to capture and digest data from other vehicles and infrastructure, and then act upon that data in order to make our roads safer and more efficient. IoT connectivity will allow vehicles to assess the effectiveness of different features such as their braking and steering systems, perform predictive maintenance, and even update a their firmware and software without human intervention. Experts agree, V2X will get a big boost from the emergence of 5G as well.

    (Image source: NXP Semiconductors

  • 5.) More sensors on the road

    Cars are already packed with sensors, and more and more advanced sensors such as LiDAR and even thermal are implemented into autonomous cars. But more sensors will also be coming to our roads. Road scanning will be using sensors and cameras to scan the road ahead, identifying any possible imperfections or hitches. Smart vehicles will then use that information to adjust their routes accordingly.WaveSense, a Boston-based sensor company, for example, is using ground-penetrating radar to help vehicles map topography.

    (Image source: WaveSense)

As a child, Ariana Merrill loved to figure out how cars worked, and this has translated into her love and passion for mechanical engineering.  For the past 12 years, Ariana has been helping communities thrive through careful monitoring and innovation of electrical and mechanical systems. Ariana also is a tech enthusiast living in New Jersey. She is a computer science and engineering graduate, specialized in artificial intelligence. She loves to write on how AI is paving all industries.  

10-semi-electronic-device-tech-reveals-from-ieee-iedm-2019

2019 IEEE IEDM event reveals latest node chips, chiplets, memories for AI, densest thin-film batteries, 400Gbits/s silicon photonics, quantum computing tools and much more.

  • The theme for this year’s 65th IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM) was, “Innovative Devices for an Era of Connected Intelligence.” As in previous years, major semiconductor players including and international research organizations (e.g., imec, CEA-Leti, UC universities and others) presented the latest detailed technology for processors, memories, interfaces and power device devices. Additionally, the event included quantum computing advances, medical uses and other newer areas of application.

    Here are 10 of the major semiconductor “reveals” at the show for 2019.

  • Leading Edge 5nm Chip with Super Dense Memory

    Moore’s Law may be hitting the wall but it’s not dead yet. TSMC unveiled a complete 5nm technology platform that advanced silicon chip scaling (miniaturization) to the next process node. Reaching the 5nm node milestone was due in part to advances in lithography and improvements in process and packaging techniques.

    TSMC researchers described a 5nm CMOS process optimized for both mobile and high-performance computing. It offered nearly twice the logic density and a 15% speed gain or 30% power reduction over the company’s 7nm process. The process optimization incorporated extensive use of EUV lithography to replace immersion lithography at key points in the manufacturing process.

    TSMC’s 5nm platform also featured FinFETs and high-density SRAM cells. The SRAM could be optimized for low-power or high-performance applications, and the researchers say the high-density version was the highest-density SRAM ever reported. The researchers say high-volume production was targeted for 1H20.

  • Quantum computing 

    Great strides have been made in quantum computing. At the Semicon West/Electronic System Design (ESD) 2019 conference, IBM displayed it’s  IBM Q Experience, a cloud-based quantum computer available for free to anyone with a web browser and an internet connection.

    Creating a quantum computer has been an amazing technological achievement, but like any computer it needs software. Imec – the international Flemish R&D nanoelectronics organization – presented the first step toward developing a systematic approach to the design of quantum computing devices.

    EDA chip design software such as TCAD is necessary to produce highly accurate models of semiconductor devices and their operation. To date, no analogous tools exist to model qubits, the basis of quantum computing, because the field is so new and complex. If these design tools did exist, the development of quantum computers could take place much more quickly.

    The Imec team has taken a step to create such a software framework using multiphysics simulation methods to develop a comprehensive design methodology for qubits built in silicon. They modeled device electrostatics, stress, micro-magnetics, band structure and spin dynamics. Based on the results of these studies, they say that single-electron qubits in quantum dots can be induced and optimized in silicon MOSFETs with thin (<20nm) gate oxides. The researchers will discuss critical aspects of their methodology, the parameters they modeled, and next steps.

  • 3D Chiplets

    Intel presented a novel 3D heterogeneous integration process for chiplet creation. It is seen as an evolution of Moore’s Law, a way to keep the scaling, size and cost benefits continuing into the foreseeable future.

    Chiplets are a type of advanced packaging which offers a different way to integrate multiple dies into a package or system. There are a number of ways to make chiplets, but all use a library of modular chips – like Lego building blocks. These module chips are assembled in a package that connects them using a die-to-die interconnect scheme.

    There are many other approaches to combining chip dies, i.e., 2.5D dies that are stacked on top of an interposer. But the hope with a chiplet approach is that it’s a faster and less expensive way to assemble various types of third-party chips like processors, memory, interfaces and the like.

    Here are the details: Intel believes that heterogeneous 3D integration will drive scaling. CMOS technology requires both NMOS and PMOS devices. Intel researchers used 3D sequential stacking architecture to combine these different devices. They first built Si FinFET NMOS transistors on a silicon wafer. On a separate Si wafer they fabricated a single-crystalline Ge film for use as a buffer layer. They flipped the second wafer, bonded it to the first, annealed them both to produce a void-free interface, cleaved the second wafer away except for the Ge layer, and then built gate-all-around (GAA) Ge-channel PMOS devices on top of it. The researchers say these results show that heterogeneous 3D integration is promising for CMOS logic in highly scaled technology nodes.

    This images hows a schematic and a cross-section of a fully processed 3D CMOS transistor structure achieved by this process; in the middle is a thickness contour map of the Ge transfer layer, showing good uniformity; and at right is a 3D cross-sectional view of the completed 3D CMOS chip showing Ge-channel GAA transistors on top of Si FinFET NMOS transistors.

  • AI That Does’t Forget

    Embedded STT-MRAM and other non-volatile memories (NVMs) are getting a lot of attention lately. NVMs devices retain their memory even after the power is removed. Embedded SST-NRAM is one NVM that shows particular promise in the embedded memory space for cache memory in IoT and AI applications.

    At IEDM 2019, TSMC described a versatile 22nm STT-MRAM technology for AI while Intel talked about STT-MRAMs for use in L4 cache applications.

    In STT-RAM writing, an electric current is polarized by aligning the spin direction of the electrons flowing through a magnetic tunnel junction (MTJ) element. Data writing is performed by using the spin-polarized current to change the magnetic orientation of the information storage layer in the MTJ element. Intel improved the process and stack for L4 cache applications. STT-MRAM technology for L4 cache requires tighter bitcell pitches, which translate into smaller MTJ sizes and reduced available write current.

  • Organ Forceps With a Special Touch

    Our internal organs are slippery because they’re covered with blood and other body fluids, so grasping and pulling them with forceps can be challenging. Although contact-force sensors have been placed on the tips of forceps used in diagnostic laparoscopic and robotic surgeries, there currently is no way to know if they are slipping, other than visually via a monitor, which has limited usefulness. A Kagawa University team described a highly sensitive slip-sensing imager (sub-mm resolution) and novel algorithm that can, in effect, give forceps a sense of touch. The idea is to use the device to visualize the spatial distribution of the grasping force across the organ’s surface. The center of that distributed load is calculated, and as the forceps are moved the algorithm relates any corresponding movements of the load center to slippage. Built on an SOI wafer, the device’s force-sensor pixels consist of a 20µm–thick piezoelectric silicon diaphragm (400µm diameter) with a center contact, and with a force detection circuit integrated on the diaphragm. The diaphragm acts as a strain gauge as it flexes due to varying grasping force.

  • Impedance Sensor for Fingerprint Imaging

    Researchers led by Cornell discussed the monolithic integration of a piezoelectric aluminum nitride (AlN) resonator into a CMOS-controlled, GHz ultrasonic impedance sensor/imager. The device measures changes in surface properties such as surface oxidation, materials, liquid viscosity and others, and is meant for use in wearable, IoT and smartphone systems to detect fingerprints with high resolution, determine tissue states, and for other applications. This is the first time monolithic fabrication – all in one chip or die –  has been successfully demonstrated, and it led to small, power-efficient GHz sensing arrays with improved performance vs. the standard two-chip heterogeneous integration approach, thanks to less parasitic coupling and a higher signal-to-noise ratio.

  • Thin-Film Battery Goes High-Density

    The miniaturization of power sources hasn’t kept pace with the miniaturization of electronics. Although integrated electrochemical capacitors offer high power density, high frequency response and novel form factors, their low energy densities are of limited value for MEMS and autonomous device applications that require long periods between charging. CEA-Leti researchers discussed a thin-film battery (TFB) with the highest areal energy density yet reported (890 µAh/cm-2) and high-power density (450 µAh/cm-2). Built on silicon wafers using UV photolithography and etching for the successive deposition and patterning of each layer, the thin-film battery integrates a 20µm-thick LiCoO2 cathode in a Li-free anode configuration. It showed good cycling behavior over 100 cycles, and the fact it was built using a wafer-level process opens up the possibility to tightly integrate this battery technology with future electronic devices.

  • Physically Unclonable Function (PUF) for Mobile and Smart Devices

    The spread of networked mobile devices and smart gadgets in the IoT landscape has created an urgent need to protect them with lightweight and low-power cryptographic solutions. A physically unclonable function (PUF) is a hardware-intrinsic security primitive, or basic programming element. UC Santa Barbara researchers discussed an ultra-low-power PUF that operates on the varying electrical resistances and current leakages that arised from intrinsic process variations in ReRAM crossbar arrays. The team built 4K-ReRAM passive crossbar circuit arrays fabricated with a CMOS-compatible process suitable for back-end-of-the-line (BEOL) integration. The arrays allow for an extremely large number of challenge-response pairs (a common cryptographic protocol), as well as 4x better density vs. other ReRAM architectures plus a ~100x improvement in power efficiency and more robust security metrics.

  • Silicon photonics

    Very fast speed data races around within data centers via optical fiber, using silicon photonic (light-based) interfaces that operate at 100 Gb/s. But cloud data center traffic is growing at nearly 30% per year and there soon will be a need to increase the data rates. A STMicroelectronics-led team described a new silicon photonics technology platform built on 300mm Silicon-on-Insulator (SOI) wafers, yielding devices that operate at 400Gbits/s (each device has 4 channels, each of which operates at 100Gbits/s, for a total of 400Gbits/s).

    Optical coupling and polarization management are key requirements, and their devices incorporate a 60 GHz high-speed photodiode and a high-speed phase modulator. They also built devices with a supplementary SiN waveguide layer for higher coupling efficiency, to meet evolving data-transmission requirements. The researchers say the photonics platform has the potential to meet the requirements of applications other than data centers, too, such as automotive.

    The image is a photo of the chip-on-board assembly of an analog front-end (AFE) function implemented in a 400G-DR4 optical transceiver using the technology, and (2b) are PAM4 signal eye diagrams at 106 Gbits/s per channel, used to measure high-speed signal quality.

  • 5G and beyond

    One of the challenges for chip makers is how to integrate III-V materials with silicon to make ultra-fast devices for 5G and other uses, which are compatible with conventional CMOS technology.  In addition to silicon, III-V compound semiconductors are obtained by combining group III elements (essentially Al, Ga, In) with group V elements (essentially N, P , As, Sb). This gives us 12 possible combinations; the most important ones are probably GaAs, InP GaP and GaN.

    IOT and 5G applications typically use sensors that transmit wireless data to anedge or cloud network. This requires a combination of RF capabilities with a small form factor and low operating power. A promising approach to achieve this combination is to create single chips that combine the capabilities of silicon CMOS with those of III-V devices, such as gallium nitride (GaN) and indium gallium arsenide (InGaAs). The unique properties of III-V compounds make then well suited for optoelectronics (LEDs) and communications (5G).

    At IEDM, Intel talked described how low-leakage, high-k dielectric enhancement mode GaN NMOS and Si PMOS transistors were built monolithically on a 300mm Si substrate. The goal was to combine GaN’s high-frequency/-temperature/-power attributes with silicon CMOS circuitry’s digital signal processing, logic, memory and analog capabilities, to create compact devices for next-generation solutions for power delivery, RF and system-on-chip (SoC) applications. The researchers say both device types demonstrated excellent performance across a range of electrical specifications.

    III-V materials offer higher electron mobilities than silicon, and HBTs made from them are very fast transistors often used for RF and other high-frequency applications. A key goal is to build them on 300mm silicon wafers instead of other substrates, to take advantage of silicon’s lower manufacturing costs. A team led by imec described how they used a unique nano-ridge engineering technique to build GaAs/InGaP HBTs on a 300mm silicon substrate.

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John Blyler is a Design News senior editor, covering the electronics and advanced manufacturing spaces. With a BS in Engineering Physics and an MS in Electrical Engineering, he has years of hardware-software-network systems experience as an editor and engineer within the advanced manufacturing, IoT and semiconductor industries. John has co-authored books related to system engineering and electronics for IEEE, Wiley, and Elsevier

vote-for-the-2020-engineer-of-the-year

Now is the time to cast your vote for the DesignCon 2020 Engineer of the Year. This award is given out each year during the DesignCon event and seeks to recognize the best of the best in engineering and new product advancements at the chip, board, or system level, with a special emphasis on signal integrity and power integrity.

Editors of Design News and the staff of DesignCon would like to offer hearty congratulations to the finalists. For this year’s award, the winner (or his/her representative) will be able to direct a $1,000 donation to any secondary educational institution in the United States. The details on each nominee are below as provided in their published biographies and by the person/s who made the nomination. Please cast your vote by following this link.

Voting closes at noon Pacific Time on Friday, December 27. The winner will be announced at DesignCon 2020, January 28-30, at the Santa Clara Convention Center, Santa Clara, CA.

The six finalists for the 2020 DesignCon Engineer of the Year Award are (click each name to see finalist’s bio and community activity):

Cast your vote for the 2020 Engineer of the Year by noon PT, December 27.

See the Official Rules of the Engineer of the Year Award

Please click here to learn more about DesignCon and register to attend

Jay Diepenbrock

Consultant, SIRF Consultants LLC

DesignCon 2020 Engineer of the Year finalist Jay Diepenbrock from SIRF ConsultantsJoseph C. (Jay) Diepenbrock holds an Sc. B. (EE) from Brown University and an MSEE from Syracuse University. He worked in a number of development areas in IBM including IC, analog and RF circuit, and backplane design. He then moved to IBM’s Integrated Supply Chain, working on the electrical specification, testing, and modeling of connectors and cables and was IBM’s Subject Matter Expert on high speed cables. After a long career at IBM he left there and joined Lorom America as Senior Vice President, High Speed Engineering, and led the Lorom Signal Integrity team, supporting its high speed product development. He left Lorom in 2015 and is now a signal integrity consultant with SIRF Consultants, LLC. 

Holding 12 patents, 30 publications, and a recognized expert in SI, Jay is currently the technical editor of the IEEE P370 standard and has worked on numerous other industry standards. He is a Senior Member of the IEEE and was an EMC Society Distinguished Lecturer. Jay has a steadfast commitment to solid engineering and communicating/teaching about it. He regularly contributes to industry discourse and education at events and in trade publications. He has made a distinguished career in high-speed product development, including backplane design, high speed connectors and cables, and signal integrity consulting. Beyond that, Jay actively volunteers his time for disaster and humanitarian relief around the world, including being part of the IEEE MOVE truck, which provides emergency communications during and after a disaster. He truly uses his engineering skills to make the world a better place.

Jay is a long-time, active member of the DesignCon Technical Program Committee.

This year at DesignCon, Jay will be presenting the tutorial “Introduction to the IEEE P370 Standard & Its Applications for High Speed Interconnect Characterization” and speaking in the panel “Untangling Standards: The Challenges Inside the Box.”

Cast your vote for the 2020 Engineer of the Year by noon PT, December 27.

Vladimir Dmitriev-Zdorov

Senior Key Expert, EBS Product Development, Mentor, A Siemens Business

DesignCon 2020 Engineer of the Year finalist Vladimir Dmitriew-Zhorov from Mentor, A Siemens BusinessDr. Vladimir Dmitriev-Zdorov has developed a number of advanced models and novel simulation methods used in Mentor products. His current work includes development of efficient methods of circuit/system simulation in the time and frequency domains, transformation and analysis of multi-port systems, and statistical and time-domain analysis of SERDES links. He received Ph.D. and D.Sc. degrees (1986, 1998) based on his work on circuit and system simulation methods. The results have been published in numerous papers and conference proceedings, including DesignCon. Several DesignCon papers such as “BER-and COM-Way of Channel-Compliance Evaluation: What are the Sources of Differences?” and “A Causal Conductor Roughness Model and its Effect on Transmission Line Characteristics” have received the Best Paper Award. Dr. Vladimir Dmitriev-Zdorov holds 9 patents.

Vladimir is an active member of the DesignCon Technical Program Committee.

This year at DesignCon, Vladimir will be presenting the technical session, “How to Enforce Causality of Standard & “Custom” Metal Roughness Models” and on the panel “Stump the SI/PI Experts.”

Cast your vote for the 2020 Engineer of the Year by noon PT, December 27.

Tim Hollis

Fellow, Micron Technology

DesignCon 2020 Engineer of the Year finalist Tim Hollis from Micron TechnologiesTim Hollis is a distinguished member of the Macron Technologies technical staff and an advanced signaling R&D lead. His main focus is in identifying and directing forward-looking projects for the SI R&D team to pursue and driving a cross-functional working group intended to provide forward-looking technical guidance to upper management.

Tim has shown outstanding technical leadership in solving numerous challenges with regard to high-speed DDR memory interfaces, for both computing and graphics applications. He has contributed papers to DesignCon as received a Best Paper Award in 2018 as lead author for “16Gb/s and Beyond with Single-Ended I/O in High-Performance Graphics Memory.” His 85 patents reflect his innovative mind and his prodigious contributions to technology.

Tim received a BS in Electrical Engineering from University of Utah and a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from Brigham Young University.

Cast your vote for the 2020 Engineer of the Year by noon PT, December 27.

Istvan Novak

Principle SI and PI Engineer, Samtec

DesignCon 2020 Engineer of the Year finalist Istvan Novak from SamtecIstvan Novak is a Principle Signal and Power Integrity Engineer at Samtec, working on advanced signal and power integrity designs. Prior to 2018 he was a Distinguished Engineer at SUN Microsystems, later Oracle. He worked on new technology development, advanced power distribution and signal integrity design and validation methodologies for SUN’s successful workgroup server families. He introduced the industry’s first 25um power-ground laminates for large rigid computer boards, and worked with component vendors to create a series of low-inductance and controlled-ESR bypass capacitors. He also served as SUN’s representative on the Copper Cable and Connector Workgroup of InfiniBand, and was engaged in the methodologies, designs and characterization of power-distribution networks from silicon to DC-DC converters. He is a Life Fellow of the IEEE with twenty-five patents to his name, author of two books on power integrity, teaches signal and power integrity courses, and maintains a popular SI/PI website.

Istvan has in many cases single handedly helped the test and measurement industry develop completely new instruments and methods of measurement. New VNA types and Scope probes and methodologies are in the market today thanks to Istvan’s efforts and openness to help others. He was responsible for the power distribution and high-speed signal integrity designs of SUN’s V880, V480, V890, V490, V440, T1000, T2000, T5120 and T5220 midrange server families. Last, but not least, Istvan has been a tremendous contributor to SI List, educating and helping engineers across the world with their SI/PI problems. Istvan is an active member of the DesignCon Technical Program Committee, sharing his expertise by participating in the review of content for multiple tracks. He is an IEEE Fellow and has been a tutor at the University of Oxford, Oxford, UK for the past 10 years. He has also been a faculty member at CEI Europe AB since 1991 and served as Vice Dean of Faculty, Associate Professor at the Technical University of Budapest.

At DesignCon 2020, Istvan will be participating in the technical session, “Current Distribution, Resistance & Inductance in Power Connectors,” and the panel, “Stump the SI/PI Experts.”

Cast your vote for the 2020 Engineer of the Year by noon PT, December 27.

Michael Schnecker

Business Development Manager, Rohde & Schwarz

DesignCon 2020 Engineer of the Year finalist JMichael Schnecker from Rohde & SchwarzMichael Schnecker’s experience in the test and measurement industry includes applications, sales and product development and specialization in signal integrity applications using oscilloscopes and other instruments. Prior to joining Rohde & Schwarz, Mike held positions at LeCroy and Tektronix. While at LeCroy, he was responsible for the deployment of the SDA series of serial data analyzers.    

Mike has more than two decades of experience working with oscilloscope measurements. His background in time and frequency domains provides him with unique insight into the challenges engineers face when testing high-speed systems for both power and signal integrity. Interacting with engineers in the industry daily has allowed Mike to master the ability to explain complex measurement science to engineers at any level. He also holds several patents, including methods and apparatus for analyzing serial data streams as well as coherent interleaved sampling. Thus, Mike is recognized as a thought leader and exceptional mentor in the signal and power integrity community.

Mike has a BS from Lehigh University and an MS from Georgia Tech, both in electrical engineering. 

This year at DesignCon, Mike will be presenting the tutorial “Signal Integrity: Measurements & Instrumentation“ and at the technical session, “Real-Time Jitter Analysis Using Hardware Based Clock Recovery & Serial Pattern Trigger.”

Cast your vote for the 2020 Engineer of the Year by noon PT, December 27.

Yuriy Shlepnev

President and Founder, Simberian

DesignCon 2020 Engineer of the Year finalist Yuriy Shlepnev from SimberianYuriy Shlepnev is President and Founder of Simberian Inc., where he develops Simbeor electromagnetic signal integrity software. He received M.S. degree in radio engineering from Novosibirsk State Technical University in 1983, and the Ph.D. degree in computational electromagnetics from Siberian State University of Telecommunications and Informatics. He was principal developer of electromagnetic simulator for Eagleware Corporation and leading developer of electromagnetic software for simulation of signal and power distribution networks at Mentor Graphics. The results of his research are published in multiple papers and conference proceedings.

Yuriy conceived and brought to market a state of the art electromagnetic field solver tool suite and is considered an expert in his field and regularly posts teaching videos. He is a senior member of IEEE AP, MYY, EMC, and CPMT societies. He is also a Fellow of Kong’s Electromagnetics Academy and a member of the Applied Computational Electromagnetics Society (ACES).

Yuriy is active in the Technical Program Committee for DesignCon and has served a track co-chair in the past. At DesignCon this year he will be presenting the tutorial “Design Insights from Electromagnetic Analysis & Measurements of PCB & Packaging Interconnects Operating at 6- to 112-Gbps & Beyond” and speaking in the technical session “Machine Learning Applications for COM Based Simulation of 112Gb Systems.”

Cast your vote for the 2020 Engineer of the Year by noon PT, December 27.

Learn more about DesignCon and register to attend

the-9-most-disruptive-tech-trends-of-2019

What were the breakthrough technologies for 2019? The answer depends on who you ask. Several common themes have emerged such as cobots, emerging energy source, AI, and cybersecurity breaches. Let’s consider each in more detail.

1.) Robotics – collaborative robots (or cobots)

(Image source: OpenAI and Dactyl)

Remember Dum-E (short for dummy) from the first Iron Man movie? Dum-E was a cobot that helped Tony Stark created his flying robotic suit. It was a scaled down, more human, interactive version of the traditional industrial-grade manufacturing line arm robots.

Cobots are designed to collaboratively work alongside human with a gentle touch, i.e., to not smash fingers or step on the toes of their work buddies. Doing so requires that cobots be much more aware of their location in relation to the humans, via sensing and perception technologies. To achieve this goal, one company, Veo Robotics, uses a variety of 3D sensors placed around the robot’s workcell to aid in location awareness. The company’s sensors add an extra measure of safety by automatically slowing down the movement of the industrial cobots whenever a human co-worker comes close.

To help supplement actual human activity, cobots are becoming more dexterous and moving beyond merely picking components on an assembly line. Robots need greater dexterity to pick up objects that have moved even slightly beyond their programmed parameters. Cobots cannot yet grasp any object just by looking at it, but they can now learn to manipulate an object on their own. 

OpenAI, a nonprofit company, recently introduced Dactyl, a dexterous robotic arm that taught itself to flip a toy building block in its fingers. Dactyl uses neural network software to learn how to grasp and turn the block within a simulated environment before the hand tries it out for real. According to the company, they’ve been able to train neural networks to solve the Rubik’s Cube Problem using reinforcement learning and Kociemba’s algorithm for picking the solution steps.