Electronics Articles

Electropages Insights Blog covers the latest in electronic design through webinars and articles. Delve into topics from sensors to AI implications. Stay ahead with Electropages.


What's all this Internet-of-Water drip-feed about – anyhow?

A water management system dubbed the Internet of Water and being trialed in Flanders could help control water quality and improve supply, something UK water utilities might find useful. This Belgium system uses wireless-connected sensors and intelligent sof...

By Paul Whytock | 13-07-2018

Bacteria on a ingestible microchip could one day detect cancer and other ailments

Genetically engineered bacteria that can detect bleeding in the stomach and potentially other gastrointestinal problems have been combined with electronics that convert the bacterial response into a wireless signal that can be read by a smartphone. “At the mom...

By Rob Coppinger | 12-07-2018

Technological fix driving onboard Ethernet communication

With laptop in hand you are about to set off on your train, metro, bus or tram journey home hoping to get some work done using the onboard Ethernet. What you don’t know is the sheer number of settings, any of which can fail, that make this endeavour possible....

By Nnamdi Anyadike | 09-07-2018

The memristor, a resistor with a memory, could replace the transistor

Memristors are simpler than transistors, smaller, use less energy, can alter their resistance and remember previous states which could lead to computers that use less power, never forget, have improved distributed memory and processing and can switch on and of...

By Rob Coppinger | 06-07-2018

What's all this robo-surgery stitch-up about - anyhow?

Being served drinks by a robot in a glittering high-tech bar is one thing but would you want one operating autonomously on one of your major organs? Mercifully, the scalpel-wielding-droid question does not currently arise for patients who are just about to...

By Paul Whytock | 05-07-2018

'Smart factory' - the key to Industrial Revolution 4.0

The fourth industrial revolution is fast becoming a reality in many parts of the developed world. And as this revolution comes into being, manufacturing is being transformed with a move to fully ‘smart’ or intelligent factories and the evolution of smarter pro...

By Nnamdi Anyadike | 02-07-2018

Can ARM-based Thin Clients Provide a Secure Alternative to Windows Desktops?

Do the challenges presented by the disclosure of the Meltdown and Spectre exploits remain locked into the usual bug-patch-repeat dynamic? Do businesses have a choice beyond putting up with PCs slowed by patching the bugs? It turns out that there could be a...

By Christian Cawley | 29-06-2018

Smartphone app developed to detect fake or failing flash memory

How long it takes for a memory microchip to delete data is to be used to detect fake or failing flash memory with a smartphone app expected next year. The electronics industry faces two challenges with components, the infiltration of counterfeit parts into...

By Rob Coppinger | 28-06-2018

Robust electronic relays boosting connections for industrial and railway applications

The market for robust relay modules is growing rapidly on the back of rising demand from heavy duty industrial and infrastructural applications. Relays come in a variety of styles and technologies and it is important to match the one that best suits their desi...

By Nnamdi Anyadike | 27-06-2018

Advancement in Neuromorphic computing with nanoscale devices that acts like a neuron

Neuromorphic computing, electronic devices that imitate the processes of the human brain for faster, more energy efficient, computation could have come one step closer with the development of a nanoscale device that acts like a neuron. Neurons in the brain...

By Rob Coppinger | 22-06-2018

What's all this game-changing MRAM gizmo-tech about - anyway?

MRAM (magnetoresistive random-access memory) technology has been around for the past 30 years but recent developments could make it the go-to memory tech. Why is that? The major developmental reasons relate to speed, density and those all-important power cons...

By Paul Whytock | 20-06-2018

Optoelectronic sensor usage spurring innovation

The market for optoelectronic sensors is growing with new unveilings coming from an ever increasing array of suppliers. The devices, which source, detect and control light are used in a wide variety of industrial applications. These range from the environment,...

By Nnamdi Anyadike | 18-06-2018