Toshiba is enhancing its TX family of ARM core-based microcontrollers MCU) by developing three new series – TXZ0, TXZ3 and TXZ4 that support low power consumption and high-speed operation for IoT and M2M ecosystems. Sample shipments of the TXZ3 range will start in the second quarter of 2016, with the first member of the family being the TMPM3H, based on an ARM Cortex-M3 core. It offers 30 products characterised by small packages with pin counts of 100 pins or fewer, and a low Flash memory capacity of 128 KB with standard circuits. Toshiba expects the products to lower power consumption for entire systems, targeting 100 μA/MHz or lower.
Collaboration is now critical RS South Africa
Manufacturing / Production Technology, Hardware & Services
The message emerging from RS Connect is clear: Organisations can no longer rely on internal optimisation alone to secure performance. Competitive advantage is increasingly being determined by the strength of external relationships, shared capability and coordinated action across value chains.
Read more...ESP32-S31 for advanced IoT iCorp Technologies
DSP, Micros & Memory
At the heart of the device is a dual-core 32-bit RISC-V MCU operating at up to 320 MHz, delivering 6,86 CoreMark/MHz performance with MMU support for efficient memory management.
Read more...Semi-shielded power inductors RS South Africa
Passive Components
The SDCx family from Eaton includes the SDCL and SDCH series of semi-shielded power inductors designed for reliable performance in consumer, industrial, energy, and medical applications.
Read more...Cortex-M33 performance for cost-sensitive designs Future Electronics
DSP, Micros & Memory
The STM32C5 series from STMicroelectronics introduces a new generation of entry-level microcontrollers engineered to deliver enhanced processing capability, modern security, and cost-effective scalability for connected embedded applications.
Read more...Extending the range of power converters RS South Africa
Power Electronics / Power Management
Power Integrations recently announced a breakthrough in flyback topology extending the power range of flyback converters to 440 W - well beyond the limits that traditionally required more complex resonant and LLC topologies.
Read more...Memory shortage 2026: Engineering implications for South Africa
DSP, Micros & Memory
[Sponsored] Addressing this challenge requires system-level thinking and adoption with McKinsey Electronics providing the engineering and sourcing framework required to maintain system resilience despite ongoing global constraints.
Read more...Cost-effective microcontroller series Altron Arrow
DSP, Micros & Memory
The STM32C5 series from STMicroelectronics delivers an excellent balance of performance, efficiency, and affordability for embedded designs that require more capability without increasing bill of materials cost.
Read more...Battery-friendly Thread and BLE solution iCorp Technologies
DSP, Micros & Memory
Positioned as an incremental upgrade to the ESP32-H2, Espressif’s ESP32-H21 adds an integrated DC-DC converter that reduces active current draw and helps extend battery life in power-sensitive consumer and industrial devices.
Read more...Next generation HMI processing platform Future Electronics
DSP, Micros & Memory
Microchip’s latest hybrid MCU SiP integrates an Arm926EJ-S processor with 512 Mb of DDR2 SDRAM and is engineered to meet the rising demand for sophisticated HMI solutions in modern vehicles.
Read more...Tiny noise suppression filters RS South Africa
Passive Components
TDK Corporation recently announced its latest noise suppression filters of the MAF0603GWY series, which measure only 0,6 x 0,3 x 0,3 mm.
While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.