Who has the leverage in this trade war? The U.S. is a big buyer of foreign goods, which is something that President Donald Trump is looking to change, but in …
The post Who Has The Leverage In Trade? appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
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Who has the leverage in this trade war? The U.S. is a big buyer of foreign goods, which is something that President Donald Trump is looking to change, but in …
The post Who Has The Leverage In Trade? appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
The Space Foundation has released its 2025 Q1 report showing a growth in the sector’s employment – the space workforce has increased 18% over five years. Space workforce This is …
The post Space Foundation report highlights growing U.S. space workforce appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
Nvidia is No. 1 – overtaking Samsung and Intel – as worldwide semiconductor revenue rose to $655.9 billion last hear, up 21% from $542.1 billion in 2023, according to Gartner. …
The post Nvidia becomes No.1 appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
Indian start-up Ziroh Labs of Bengaluru has come up with a way to run AI programmes on relatively inexpensive CPUs instead of ultra-expensive GPUs. Called Kompact AI, the technology is …
The post India startup Ziroh runs AI models on CPUs instead of GPUs appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
ST’s supervisory board has denied allegations of insider trading by two members of its managing board one of whom is CEO Jean-Marc Chery, reports Reuters. Italy’s Economy Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti …
The post Allegations of insider trading by ST management appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
By Steve Bush
Microchip has introduced a 32 logic elements programmable array into a microcontroller. Each logic element can simulate AND, OR, NAND or NOR gate, a buffer or inverting buffer, a D …
The post Microchip’s 32 LUT programmable logic block for PICs appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
By Steve Bush
Rohm has created three n-channel power mosfets in 5 x 6mm DFN packaging. RS7E200BG is a 30V mosfet optimised for both secondary-side ac-dc conversion and hot-swap controllers in 12V enterprise …
The post 0.53mΩ mosfet in 5 x 6mm DFN package appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
By Steve Bush
Melexis has created a 32 x 24 pixel far-infra-red sensor array that can photograph the temperature of objects at between -40 and +260°C. Dubbed MLX90642, it comes in a 9.3mm …
The post 24 by 32 pixel thermal camera array ICs appeared first on Electronics Weekly .
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Today, Amazon ElastiCache introduces the ability to perform vertical scaling on self-designed Memcached caches on ElastiCache. Amazon ElastiCache is a fully managed, Valkey-, Memcached- and Redis OSS-compatible service that delivers real-time, cost-optimized performance for modern applications with 99.99% availability. With this launch, you can now dynamically adjust the compute and memory resources of your ElastiCache for Memcached clusters, providing greater flexibility and scalability.
Hundreds and thousands of customers use ElastiCache to improve their database and application performance and optimize costs. With vertical scaling on ElastiCache for Memcached, you can now seamlessly scale up or down your Memcached instances to match your application’s changing workload demands without disrupting your cluster architecture. You can scale up to boost performance and increase cache capacity during high-traffic periods, or scale down to optimize costs when demand is low. This enables you to align your caching infrastructure with your evolving application needs, enhancing cost efficiency and improving resource utilization.
Vertical scaling on ElastiCache for Memcached is now available in all AWS regions. You can get started using the AWS Management Console, Software Development Kit (SDK), or Command Line Interface (CLI). For more information, please visit the ElastiCache features page and documentation .
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Starting today, Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) R6id instances are available in Europe (Spain) Region. These instances are powered by 3rd generation Intel Xeon Scalable Ice Lake processors with an all-core turbo frequency of 3.5 GHz and up to 7.6 TB of local NVMe-based SSD block-level storage. R6id instances are built on AWS Nitro System , a combination of dedicated hardware and lightweight hypervisor, which delivers practically all of the compute and memory resources of the host hardware to your instances for better overall performance and security. Customers can take advantage of access to high-speed, low-latency local storage to scale performance of applications such data logging, distributed web-scale in-memory caches, in-memory databases, and real-time big data analytics.
These instances are generally available today in the US East (Ohio, N.Virginia), US West (Oregon), Canada West (Calgary), Mexico (Central), Asia Pacific (Malaysia, Mumbai, Seoul, Singapore, Sydney, Thailand, Tokyo), Europe (Frankfurt, Ireland, London, Spain), Israel (Tel Aviv), and AWS GovCloud (US-West) Regions .
Customers can purchase the new instances via Savings Plans, Reserved, On-Demand, and Spot instances. To learn more, see Amazon R6id instances. To get started, visit AWS Command Line Interface (CLI) , and AWS SDKs .