We just packed 237 of your projects into our most packed ASIC to date and submitted it for manufacture. Let’s take a look inside…
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It was the first time we enabled 4 tile high designs, enabling a monster crowd sourced RISC-V microcontroller competition called Asteroid. At 60k standard cells, this is the biggest design so far on Tiny Tapeout. https://t.co/m5igspkX9F
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Inspired by Peter Kinget, we commissioned Andrew Kang to create a Mini MOSBius especially for us. The idea is to enable analog designers to get faster feedback on their circuit designs with an analog FPGA. https://t.co/rwTOtMfVM5
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Mitch Altman has long inspired us, and as a tribute we included an ASIC version of his classic TV-B-Gone universal off button for TVs. We also took the opportunity to test Sylvain Munalt’s ROM. https://t.co/batFMbjIYc
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We have our first commissioned art from @Bleeptrack , “Cross Stitch Creatures” - the first of 4 in a series exploring silicon art. https://t.co/zg55pfpo23
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It’s great to see people using our service to test bigger mixed signal designs like OpenRAM. In this test, Jesse put a tiny 16x32 RAM inside a 4 tile digital design. https://t.co/sTxDQceyQR
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For all the details, the interactive viewer and to download the datasheet: https://t.co/pAxWCFCmkR Thanks to ChipFoundry for sponsoring us and helping keep #ASIC design and manufacture affordable. Our next shuttle is already open and you can take part from just €70!
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@tinytapeout What 'projects' exactly? I know I'm looking at a chip xray but aside from that I'm lost.
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@tinytapeout Let's not. Only 8 I/O lines ? Keep it. Why would anyone sane go for it instead of an FPGA ?
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@tinytapeout Where can I get a high definition copy of this photo? I love looking at circuitry sim cities!
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LimeSDR is a low cost, open source, apps-enabled software defined radio (SDR) platform that can be used to support just about any type of wireless communication standard.
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Nothing beats LDS (laser direct structuring). https://t.co/f4FGEegNs2
DissolvPCB is a novel 3D printing-based method for fabricating fully recyclable electronics. The team demonstrated the concept with ATtiny85-based circuits: https://t.co/YGbxjTmMxs
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