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Introducing Microchip's new facility, the India Development Centre, Bangalore. The fully fledged development center, which works on integrated-circuit development and marketing, microcontroller development tools and corporate information systems, was officially inaugurated by Mrs R. Rajalakshmi, Director, Software Technology Parks of India, Bangalore and Microchip's Executive Vice President, Ganesh Moorthy
Introducing Microchip's new facility, the India Development Centre, Bangalore. The fully fledged development center, which works on integrated-circuit development and marketing, microcontroller development tools and corporate information systems, was officially inaugurated by Mrs R. Rajalakshmi, Director, Software Technology Parks of India, Bangalore and Microchip's Executive Vice President, Ganesh Moorthy.
Introducing Microchip's new facility, the India Development Centre, Bangalore. The fully fledged development center, which works on integrated-circuit development and marketing, microcontroller development tools and corporate information systems, was officially inaugurated by Mrs R. Rajalakshmi, Director, Software Technology Parks of India, Bangalore and Microchip's Executive Vice President, Ganesh Moorthy.
Pet iguanas and tegus are microchipped at the University of Florida College of Veterinary Medicine on June 12, 2021. FWC photo by Karen Parker
The chipKIT™ Pro MX4 is a microcontroller development board based on the Microchip® PIC32MX460F512L, a member of the 32-bit PIC32 microcontroller family. It is compatible with Digilent's line of Pmods, and is suitable for use with the Microchip MPLAB® IDE tools. The chipKIT Pro MX4 is also compatible for use with the chipKIT MPIDE development environment.
The chipKIT Pro MX4 provides 74 I/O pins that support a number of peripheral functions, such as USB controller, UART, SPI, and I2C ports as well as five pulse-width modulated outputs and five external interrupt inputs. Fifteen of the I/O pins can be used as analog inputs in addition to their use as digital inputs and outputs.
store.digilentinc.com/chipkit-pro-mx4-embedded-systems-tr...
The cat flap does not recognise this unwelcome black and white felix-alike and refuses to open, even resisting this two-pawed pounding.
Microchip's 16-bit PIC24F microcontroller (MCU) family combines eXtreme low power (XLP) technology, low price and availability in low pin count packages for the most cost-sensitive consumer, medical, and industrial applications.
Microchip Technology Inc. announced its complete, integrated RF front-end module for WLAN IEEE 802.11b/g/n and Bluetooth® systems—the SST12LF03. This device features a transmitter power amplifier, a receiver low-noise amplifier (LNA) and a low-loss antenna switch—in one integrated, compact package. It is Microchip’s smallest 802.11b/g/n-compliant front-end module.
Microchip Technology's MCP6H01 and MCP6H02 (MCP6H01/2) general-purpose operational amplifiers (op amps) with a gain-bandwidth product of 1.2 MHz and supply voltage from 3.5V to 16V.
The Ethernet PICtail™ Plus Daughter Board provides a cost-effective method of evaluating and developing Ethernet control applications. The board is designed for flexibility and can be plugged into Microchip’s Explorer 16 (DM240001) development boards. The development board is populated with Microchip’s 28-Pin ENC28J60 Ethernet controller which interfaces to the RJ-45 female connector. When used in conjunction with the Microchip TCP/IP stack (free download below) the Ethernet PICtail Plus daughter board allows a developer to connect any Microchip 16-bit product to the Ethernet.
Features
IEEE 802.3 Compliant
10BASE-T Ethernet
RJ-45 Female Ethernet Connector
Plug in compatible with the Explorer 16 Development Board (DM240001)
Microchip Technology's MCP6H01 and MCP6H02 (MCP6H01/2) general-purpose operational amplifiers (op amps) with a gain-bandwidth product of 1.2 MHz and supply voltage from 3.5V to 16V.
Verichip utilizes the implantable, passive RFID microchip, in their solutions for the purpose of automatic identification. About the size of a grain of rice, the microchip inserts just under the skin and contains only a unique, 16-digit identifier. In the future this chip may contain Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking capabilities. And unlike conventional forms of identification, the VeriChip™ cannot be lost, stolen, misplaced, or counterfeited. It is considered safe, secure, and will always be with you. Once inserted just under the skin, via a quick, outpatient procedure (much like getting a shot), the VeriChip™ can be scanned when necessary with a proprietary VeriChip reader, whether handheld or wall-mounted. A small amount of radio frequency energy passes from the reader energizing the dormant microchip which then emits a radio frequency signal transmitting the individuals unique verification number. This number can then be used for such purposes as accessing personal medical information in a password-protected database or assessing whether somebody has authority to enter into a high-security area. VeriChip has now been approved to offer an implantable FDA approved RFID microchip.
The labeling on theses two cartridges is identical, but the chip is different. The guy at Cartridge World says that it's physically possible to refill both, but the one on the left cannot be "reset", while the one on the right can. Good to have a working printer again.