On Wednesday 25 September 2019 08:27:32 Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 25, 2019 at 9:33 PM Rhodri James
wrote:
> > Our experience as IoT consultants is
> > that clients want what they want, and chip manufacturers produce
> > what they produce, and the overlap isn't as big as you would hope.
On Wed, Sep 25, 2019 at 9:33 PM Rhodri James wrote:
> Our experience as IoT consultants is
> that clients want what they want, and chip manufacturers produce what
> they produce, and the overlap isn't as big as you would hope.
Thank you for validating my inherent cynicism :)
ChrisA
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On 25/09/2019 07:37, Frank Millman wrote:
"Since chip design is expensive, and chip designers scarce, he and his
team have been working on software tools to simplify that task. The idea
is to describe a new algorithm in Python, a widely used programming
language, and then have software turn it
The latest Technology Quarterly in The Economist is about "The Internet
Of Things".
Python gets a mention in an article on "How to build a disposable
microchip". It is quite a long article, so here are the relevant extracts.
"The goal is to produce a robust, bendable, mass-producible computer
Hi all
>From a recent article in The Economist -
"A recovering economy in America and an explosion of entrepreneurial
activity are driving up demand for tech talent. [...] Bidding battles are
breaking out, with salaries and bonuses rising fast for experts in popular
computer languages such as
FYI
http://www.economist.com/science/displayStory.cfm?Story_id=4368122&CFID=65783500&CFTOKEN=ed98f5-9eb5adc6-80da-4e08-a843-746292fe83b8
Frank Millman
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