Goto

Collaborating Authors

 electronics industry


CEVA NeuPro-M Edge AI Processor Architecture Recognized at EE Awards Asia 2022

#artificialintelligence

CEVA, Inc. (NASDAQ: CEVA), the leading licensor of wireless connectivity and smart sensing technologies and co-creation solutions announced today that NeuPro-M AI Processor architecture for artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML) inference workloads has received industry recognition with'Most Promising Product' at the EE Awards Asia 2022. 'Creating the future with the electronics industry and changing the world with engineers' is the cited aim of the EE Awards Asia 2022, with the program garnering considerable interest from leading companies across the electronics industry. Ran Snir, Vice President and General Manager of the Vision Business Unit at CEVA, commented: "To be recognized for our NeuPro-M AI/ML architecture, among the engineering community is a big honor for CEVA. This is an important validation for NeuPro-M, and evidence that Asia's engineers understand the value proposition that NeuPro-M brings for low power, high performance edge AI processing, in automotive, industrial, surveillance, smartphones and many more end markets." Targeting the broad markets of Edge AI and Edge Compute, NeuPro-M is a self-contained heterogeneous architecture.


Robot sales surge in Europe, Asia and the Americas

Robohub

Sales of industrial robots have reached a strong recovery: A new record of 486,800 units were shipped globally – an increase of 27% compared to the previous year. Asia/Australia saw the largest growth in demand: installations were up 33% reaching 354,500 units. The Americas increased by 27% with 49,400 units sold. Europe saw double digit growth of 15% with 78,000 units installed. These preliminary results for 2021 have been published by the International Federation of Robotics.


15 Robot Applications for the Electronics Industry - RoboDK blog

#artificialintelligence

Which robot applications are best suited for the electronics industry? Robots are becoming extremely popular among electronic companies. Recent estimates indicate that robot growth is even higher in the electronics industry than in the automotive industry, which has traditionally been the leader for robot use. If you are looking to add robotic automation to your process, it can be hard to know which tasks are the best candidates. Classic application in electronics manufacturing, robots are perfect for circuit board assembly.


AI and Economy in India are Climbing the Progression ladder

#artificialintelligence

Ever since the advent of AI and it's entry in India, its escalation has been directly proportional to that of Indian economy. AI and economy in India are in immense competition with that of other nations and the'Make in India' drive is one such move to make it climb the progression ladder. Launched in 2014, Make in India is an initiative by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to transform India into a global designing and manufacturing hub. Back in 2013, the year that witnessed aggressive decline in technology and economy that somewhat resonated with America's great depression; Make in India drive was a response to handle this critical situation. The idea is to boost India's progress in terms of productions and widen the chances of businesses.


Robot Race: The World s Top 10 automated countries

Robohub

The average robot density in the manufacturing industry hit a new global record of 113 units per 10,000 employees. By regions, Western Europe (225 units) and the Nordic European countries (204 units) have the most automated production, followed by North America (153 units) and South East Asia (119 units). The world s top 10 most automated countries are: Singapore (1), South Korea (2), Japan (3), Germany (4), Sweden (5), Denmark (6), Hong Kong (7), Chinese Taipei (8), USA (9) and Belgium and Luxemburg (10). This is according to the latest World Robotics statistics, issued by the International Federation of Robotics (IFR). "Robot density is the number of operational industrial robots relative to the number of workers," says Milton Guerry, President of the International Federation of Robotics.


Silicon Politics

Communications of the ACM

That has been the story Silicon Valley leaders have broadcast to the world since the region first sprang into the forefront of public consciousness as the land of silicon chips, personal computers, and video games. It is an attitude in keeping with the celebration of rugged individualism and disdain for centralized political power that has been part of American political culture since the nation's founding, ideas that gained additional allure amid the stagflating malaise of the post-Vietnam, post-Watergate 1970s. In the Reagan Revolution year of 1980, the sole election-year commentary in the microelectronics-industry newsletter InfoWorld was a cartoon tucked into a bottom corner of the editorial page. "I was going to keep track of all the candidates' significant statements," one man sighed to another as they stood in front of a computer terminal, "but there's no way to process an empty disk." Four years later, Steve Jobs declared, without embarrassment, that he had never voted in his life.


Moore's Law is dying. Here's how AI is bringing it back to life!

#artificialintelligence

Moore's Law, one of the fundamental laws indicating the exponential progress in the tech industry, especially electronic engineering, has been slowing down lately (since 2005, to be more precise), and has led many in this sector to believe this law to no longer hold true. That was, until Artificial Intelligence joined the arena! Since then, the game changed, and Moore's law is slowly being revived. Let's find out how Artificial Intelligence is defying the trend. Gordon Moore, one of the co-founders of Intel, noticed in 1965 that the number of transistors per square inch on integrated circuits had doubled yearly while, at almost the same speed, costs were halved.


Artificial Intelligence and Moore's law - Technowize

#artificialintelligence

From 1958, since the invention of the first integrated circuit till 1965, the number of components or transistor density in an integrated circuit has doubled every year, marked Gordon Moore. So when Intel, the pioneer of chip developments adapted Moore's law as standard principle for advancing the computing power, the whole semi-conductor industry followed this outline on their chips. But then with the constant advancement, the electronics industry benefited from the Moore's standard method of designing processor chips till 50 years. The technology today is tending to design artificial intelligence technology that matches the super intelligence of human brain.


Artificial intelligence will 'inevitably' destroy millions of jobs

#artificialintelligence

Investors believe it is'inevitable' that artificial intelligence will destroy millions of jobs and that governments are unprepared for such an impact, according to a new survey. Artificial intelligence (AI), or the process by which computers or robots take on tasks that need human intelligence, is one of the key themes of this week's Web Summit in Lisbon. The poll among 224 venture capitalists attending the conference showed 53 percent believed AI would destroy millions of jobs and 93 percent saw governments as unprepared for this. The poll among 224 venture capitalists attending the Web summit in Lisbon found 53 percent believed AI would destroy millions of jobs and 93 percent saw governments as unprepared for this. The survey also found that 83 percent of the investors canvassed expect Britain's exit from the European Union to damage Europe's economy and 77 percent believe it will damage British startups.


Artificial intelligence will 'inevitably' destroy millions of jobs and could bring down governments

Daily Mail - Science & tech

Investors believe it is'inevitable' that artificial intelligence will destroy millions of jobs and that governments are unprepared for such an impact, according to a new survey. Artificial intelligence (AI), or the process by which computers or robots take on tasks that need human intelligence, is one of the key themes of this week's Web Summit in Lisbon. The poll among 224 venture capitalists attending the conference showed 53 percent believed AI would destroy millions of jobs and 93 percent saw governments as unprepared for this. The poll among 224 venture capitalists attending the Web summit in Lisbon found 53 percent believed AI would destroy millions of jobs and 93 percent saw governments as unprepared for this. The survey also found that 83 percent of the investors canvassed expect Britain's exit from the European Union to damage Europe's economy and 77 percent believe it will damage British startups.