Researchers at Cornell University have developed a powerful imaging technique that reveals atomic scale defects inside computer chips for the first time. Using an advanced electron microscopy method, ...
Gallium nitride (GaN) is an ideal material for applications requiring high switching speeds and minimal power losses. While ...
Researchers at the University of Innsbruck, together with partners from Sydney and Waterloo, have presented a new diagnostic ...
In many schools, coding is introduced as a technical subject. However, structured lab ecosystems increasingly treat coding as applied logic. Through TinkerBrix, the AI and coding platform developed by ...
Work through an LR circuit problem focusing on time behavior and power. Learn how the time constant 𝜏 = 𝐿 / 𝑅 τ=L/R controls current growth/decay, and how power changes over time using 𝑃 = 𝐼 2 𝑅 ...
AI code generation appears to have a few kinks to work out before it can fully dominate software development, according to a new report by CodeRabbit. When compared to human-generated code, AI code ...
AI-driven coding promised speed, but its code often fractures under pressure, leaving teams to carry the weight of failures that slow products and raise real costs. Buoyed by the rise of AI, many ...
Aspiring engineers from 191 countries gathered in Panama City in October to compete in the FIRST Global Robotics Challenge. The annual contest aims to foster problem-solving, cooperation, and inspire ...
Something that could be useful in the debugging of networks someday - and for the game in general. Since there's a network storage data file in every save, why not output it to a circuit diagram to ...
Every year, the world throws away about 62 million metric tons of electronic waste. Despite the valuable metals in electronics, we recycle less than a quarter of what we produce. At the end of the day ...
Here at Hackaday HQ, we all have opinions about the way we like to do things. And no surprise, this extends to the way we like to lay out circuits in schematics. So when we were discussing our own ...