That was once a seven-year-old girl so full of curiosity that she dismantled seven alarm clocks to find out how they worked. Later on, she was on the teams which …
The post Fable: The Curious Admiral appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
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That was once a seven-year-old girl so full of curiosity that she dismantled seven alarm clocks to find out how they worked. Later on, she was on the teams which …
The post Fable: The Curious Admiral appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
RANsemi, the wireless baseband processor specialist, has joined Bristol University and Bristol Innovations as an inaugural member of the Bristol Innovations Zone – a collaboration, training and innovation hub within …
The post RANsemi becomes inaugural member of Bristol Innovations Zone appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
Japanese automotive components supplier Marelli Holdings, owned by US private equity outfit KKR, is expected to file for Chapter 11 in Delaware, reports the Nikkei. KKR bought Calsonic Kansei fom …
The post Marelli to file for Chapter 11 appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
Sourceability’s Lead Time Report sees increasing stabilisation following widespread inventory corrections and targeted production cuts. By late Q1, the majority of the accumulated unwanted surplus from 2023 had been mitigated. …
The post Lead times continue to stabilise, says Sourceability appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
The UK’s major space event, the UK Space Conference 2025, is heading to Manchester Central in July. Running from Wednesday 16 to Thursday 17 July, the event is aimed at …
The post UK Space Conference 2025 heading to Manchester appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
By Steve Bush
Infineon has introduced automotive microcontrollers with capacitive touch sensing for sensor and actuator applications. The PSOC 4 HVMS family is built around a 24 or 48MHz Arm Cortex-M0+ processor, with up …
The post Capacitive touch sensing in direct-to-battery automotive MCU appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
By Steve Bush
Harwin has added right-angled options to its 8.5mm pitch 60A-per-contact Kona range of single-in-line power connectors. “The Kona Horizontal lineup includes nine right-angled 4, 3 and 2pin connectors for board …
The post Right-angle 60A 8.5mm power connectors appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
By Steve Bush
GigaDevice has revealed a family of 48MHz Arm Cortex-M23 microcontrollers. Aimed at industrial use GD32C231, its “Cortex-M23 core architecture offers up to 10% higher performance than Cortex-M0+”, according to the …
The post Cortex-M23 microcontrollers appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
By admin
Amazon DynamoDB Streams is a serverless data streaming feature that makes it straightforward to track, process, and react to item-level changes in DynamoDB tables in near real time. Today, DynamoDB has added support for KCL 3.0. With KCL 3.0, you can reduce compute costs to process streaming data by up to 33% compared to previous KCL versions. KCL 3.0 introduces an enhanced load balancing algorithm that continuously monitors resource utilization of the stream processing workers and automatically redistributes the load from over-utilized workers to other underutilized workers. Additionally, KCL 3.0 is built with the AWS SDK for Java 2.x for improved performance and security features, fully removing the dependency on the AWS SDK for Java 1.x.
Kinesis Client Library (KCL) is an open-source library that simplifies the development of stream processing applications with Amazon DynamoDB Streams. It manages complex tasks associated with distributed computing such as load balancing streaming data, processing data with fault-tolerance, and coordinating distributed workers, allowing you to solely focus on your core business logic. You can upgrade your stream processing application running on KCL 1.x by simply replacing the current library to use KCL 3.0 without any changes in your data processing logic. For migration instructions, see Migrating from KCL 1.x to KCL 3.x .
KCL 3.0 is available with Amazon DynamoDB Streams in all AWS Regions
. To learn more, refer to Working with DynamoDB Streams
in the DynamoDB Developer Guide.
By admin
Amazon S3 adds S3 Tables storage cost information for individual tables in AWS Cost Explorer and AWS Cost and Usage Reports (AWS CUR). You can now track and analyze all S3 Tables costs, including storage, API requests, and maintenance operations for each table in your data lake. This helps you to make decisions about resource optimization and to attribute costs to specific projects and business units.
To view your S3 Tables storage cost at the table level, enable resource-level data in your cost management preferences, then access table-level cost data through AWS Cost Explorer. For more comprehensive cost and usage data, configure AWS CUR to show resource-level details, then set up daily reports to be sent to your specified S3 bucket.
This enhanced cost visibility for S3 Tables is rolling out in the coming weeks in all AWS Regions
where S3 Tables are available, at no additional charge. To learn more, visit the product page
and documentation
.