News
Digital-to-Analog Converters (DACs): Why INL and DNL Are Important Parameters
The performance of a Digital-to-Analog Converter (DAC) is characterized by various parameters, including Integral Non-Linearity (INL) and Differential Non-Linearity (DNL).
Building an Effective Data Transport Ecosystem for Automotive Sensor Processing
Learn more about some of the key vehicle safety components of automotive network configurations.
Microchip PoE Powers Sustainability
Learn more about how our Power over Ethernet (PoE) offerings address sustainability concerns.
Difference Between Centralized and Modular Battery Management System (BMS)
A Battery Management System (BMS) is an electronic system that manages and monitors the charging and discharging of rechargeable batteries.
Building Immutable Bootloaders With the PIC18-Q24 Family of MCUs
Learn more about how to create an immutable bootloader using the PIC18-A24 family of microcontrollers.
PCIe® Is the Key to Next-Generation Driver Assistance and Vehicle Automation
With vehicle data network latency, bandwidth, interoperability and power consumption all critical to the safe efficient operation of an autonomous vehicle
Bridging the Gap Between Sensors and AI Compute: Introducing Microchip's PolarFire FPGA Ethernet Sensor Bridge
The PolarFire® FPGA Ethernet Sensor Bridge is designed to accelerate edge AI by bridging sensor data seamlessly to NVIDIA® edge computing platforms.
Elevate Your Storage Solutions With the Adaptec® Series maxView™ Storage Manager GUI
Learn more about our Adaptec® series maxView™ Storage Manager GUI and its key features to help you manage complex storage environments with ease and precision.
Fundamental Understanding of Battery Management System – Part 2: Balancing
A Battery Management System (BMS) is an electronic system that manages and monitors the charging and discharging of rechargeable batteries.
Using the Signal Routing Port for a Shift Register on the PIC18-Q71 Family of Microcontrollers
This blog post introduces the new Signal Routing Port (SRPORT) peripheral integrated onto the PIC18-Q71 family of microcontrollers (MCUs) and future devices.