Engineeringness on MSN
How Does This Tiny Part Control Electricity?
There’s a small, silent component hiding in almost every electronic device—from your phone and laptop to your TV and charger.
But, it turns out, a thermometer has been part of photonic chips all along.
USC researchers built artificial neurons that replicate real brain processes using ion-based diffusive memristors. These ...
Engineeringness on MSN
How Resistors Work: The Building Block of All Electronics
This video breaks down how resistors work and why they’re one of the most essential components in every electronic device. From smartphones to power supplies, resistors help control the flow of ...
It isn’t unusual to expect a precisely regulated voltage in an electronic project, but what about times when you need a ...
The humble 555 timer has its origins back in the early 1970s as the NE555, a bipolar integrated circuit. Over the years it ...
A special technique produces very wide loop BWs in high-frequency PLLs (and hence, indirect (PLL) synthesizers), thereby achieving very low phase noise rivaling that of direct (MMD) synthesizers. A ...
With a 4k1 collector resistor and 16mA drive into the led, the chosen (read ‘cheapest on ebay’) 6N135 is supposed to beat 1.5μs for both turn on and turn off, with typical figures of 90ns and 800ns.
Find out more about two topologies for precision DAC protection against sustained overvoltage events: DAC with and without ...
Redditor shunt mods his GeForce RTX 4090 gaming laptop: up to 19% higher performance, closer to RTX 5090 gaming laptop, but at half the cost.
A breakthrough in neuromorphic computing could lower the energy consumption of chips and accelerate progress toward artificial general intelligence (AGI). Researchers from the USC Viterbi School of En ...
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