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Raspberry Pi Made a $4 Wi-Fi and Bluetooth Module
Raspberry Pi, the company best known for its single-board computers, just revealed its first standalone Wi-Fi and Bluetooth radio module. The new Raspberry Pi Radio Module 2 can add wireless ...
Würth Elektronik has launched Thetis-I, a ready-to-use radio module for Wirepas mesh networks and suitable for IoT device manufacturers. Networks with technology from Wirepas, the Finnish software ...
WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--L3Harris Technologies (NYSE:LHX) today announced the unveiling of its Iridium Distributed Tactical Communications Systems (DTCS) mission module at AUSA’s Annual Meeting ...
The availability of cheap radio modules is making them ubiquitous in an increasing number of projects that we have been seeing recently. The usual go-to solution is using any one of the several ...
What do you pick when you want to make something with a nostalgic touch? A radio, of course! Well, the project presented here is about building a compact Arduino FM Radio with the help of an ...
BERLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Frontier Silicon, the world’s leading supplier of digital radio and connected audio technology solutions, launches Verona 2, a new DAB digital radio module based on its 4 th ...
New York, N.Y. — Persistent Systems, LLC (“Persistent”) announced today that it has released a Lower C-Band RF module for its MPU5 radio system, reflecting the company’s commitment to a truly modular ...
Raspberry Pi has introduced the Radio Module 2, a small but powerful wireless module priced at just $4. This module is aimed at makers, developers, and organizations using RP2040 or RP2350 ...
No audio available for this content. Loctronix ASR-2300 module. Loctronix Corporation, a provider of unified positioning solutions for GNSS-challenged environments, announced that it has begun ...
Murata Manufacturing Co., Ltd. has introduced its new Type 2FR connectivity module, driven by NXP Semiconductor’s RW612 wireless microcontroller (MCU) with an integrated tri-radio. Measuring 12 × 11 ...
“You can’t put new wine in old bottles” – so the saying goes. But you would if you’re a hacker stuck with a radio built in 2005, which looked like it was put together using technology from 1975.
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