AUSTIN, Texas--May 22, 2006--Freescale Semiconductor continues to steer the automotive industry toward safer, more reliable cars with the industry's first 32-bit microcontroller (MCU) based on the ...
FlexRay was born out of necessity. As automobile manufacturers began investigating new power train, chassis, and by-wire control systems, two companies in particular, BMW and DaimlerChrysler, realized ...
MUNICH, Germany — FlexRay technology provider TTTech Automotive (Vienna) has introduced a FlexRay-based platform for chassis electronics. The pilot project has been developed in cooperation with car ...
Freescale Semiconductor (www.freescale.com) has introduced an S12XF series of 16-bit microcontrollers for use in embedded nodes on FlexRay networks for body, chassis and safety applications. Freescale ...
Freescale Semiconductor's MPC5567 is said to be the industry's first 32-bit microcontroller based on the PowerPC core to offer embedded Flash and integrated FlexRay protocol. It provides ...
Tokyo, July 27, 2004-- Renesas Technology Corp. today announced an agreement with Robert Bosch GmbH to use its FlexRayâ„¢ *1 communication controller IP in a microcontroller for automotive ...
Cars with FlexRay networks are definitely worth waiting for. You may have seen a recent commercial showing a car automatically correcting itself to prevent a rollover accident or perhaps a vehicle ...
BMW’s fifth generation M5 is built out from materials containing high tensile, ultra high tensile steel and aluminium to keep its weight down while ensuring extraordinary structural rigidity for ...