 my crazy dual camera video streaming system. It's got a 5G on Deutsche Telecom. It's got... I need to check if my sound is clean. Hopefully I'm good. Is it clipping? I hear a little bit of a clipping in there. Let me see if anybody is watching. I'll be walking around the halls filming as many cool interviews as possible. So I've got the yellow box pro. This is how I'm live streaming today and I'm going to be walking around filming with all these guys. It's going to be great. Hey, I'm just going to be live streaming. So let me get some messages if this is working or getting a bandwidth through. Is anybody getting this video on my YouTube? And does it sound good? Thanks for please writing in. Let me check myself on my phone, my channel. I see there's a live stream going on here. Okay, I'll be going around hopefully making some cool content for you. I'll be trying. This is the first real event in a while. I'll try to not make my my camera move too much. Maybe I need to check the shutter speed. Sound is good. There's no like problem with the sound at all. And how's the video? This is exciting. This is going to try to disable. Oh, there's a risk five in that corner. There's a good ram. Seagate. I think we're in a hall one. How's my video? Do you see every frame? No drop frame. Okay. Let's try to find the hall four. I was supposed to be there an hour ago. This is what you have in the halls here. Drop 0%. Not supposed to jump so much. I think it's because my smartphone selfie camera is not stabilized. So it looks like I'm jumping around in my little bubble. Jumping sound. This is jumping sound. Why would that be? I need to make sure I don't have a jumping sound. And during my live streaming, I'll try to be doing like five hours today. I know it's overkill. My main problem is connecting extra power to all the different devices that I'm carrying. And I'm trying to get three live camera angles. So there will be like my selfie camera, which is just a second hand Samsung phone. And there is my main camera with a Panasonic G9. And I can even switch over to some kind of pause video if I do like this. Where you can still hear me in the background. But I could just be speaking to and switch it off of course. Alright, let's try to find hall four. Hall four is this direction. The camera needs to be more down on my face. Now I'm putting chat chat message on the screen. I don't know if I can decide where theirs go. Can I move them around? It's too late. I guess to do the chat settings. Oh, there it is. I can do down here. Okay, sound can jumping connection. But now it's good. Okay, thanks for letting me know. Hall number four, this direction. The idea of doing live streaming is to hopefully have some interaction on my YouTube channel. So if you are an expert and enthusiast, been looking forward to the embedded world, but you're stuck in some funny country that doesn't let people travel, well then join this live show and you can leave comments and help me do the best possible questions to all these people. I'm going to be interviewing. Let's find the foundries IO. So this should be in this hall. How about this walk that did between the halls? Was the connection stable the whole way? My yellow box is saying dropping zero frames. So I just need to find the booth. Let's stand here for a second. Oh, shit. I need to find the booth. One, three, nine. One, three, nine. Four, four. Four, three. Okay, I'll be right back. And I found the booth. Here I'm going to be doing some video. Here the foundries, the foundries IO booth. How about, can you take this microphone right here? I just need to take the USB cable. Can I have some sound? Shit test. Ah, no, nothing's coming. So we can see. One, two, three, four. One, two, three, four. See, you see magic. When I start talking, you can hear me. Ah, okay. Ah, yeah, you were not talking. I was not talking. So how are you doing, Charbox? So cool. Let me just check if you are in the frame. I just need to set your volume just a little bit lower. Let me hear you again. Charbox is brilliant. Charbox is wonderful. All right. All right, that's going to be great. And I'll be recording at the same time. It's dirty here. All right. The initiative is maybe inside the bingo. Should I add anything? I'll be going. If they have a booth, please check it out. Okay. So what's with Charbox? So they're re-recording. All right. So how are you doing, Charbox? I'm cool. So what do you want to ask questions or would you just like me to talk? So how's it going in this embedded world? Charbox, great to see you. Welcome to embedded world, Foundry's 2022. As you can see, our booth is much bigger than it was two years ago. We have a lot more demos. We have a lot more partners. The business has grown. But most importantly, we're probably Europe's largest IoT secure Linux company now and growing at 20% plus a quarter. We have some major OEMs that are working with us. We have some companies like Arduino, which are shipping their first ever Linux products. But things that we can demonstrate on our booth, the first and most exciting is the first and most exciting is an electric scooter. And so this comes from Uno Motors, the screen, the power monitor, the motor control, all work on Linux, all work on our secure Linux. They have full OTA capabilities engaged. They have full security. So this is some of the unique features that we can bring to not just automotive but any product all the way from vacuum cleaners, smart shipping containers through to various other devices in the industry. So are you fixing the problem of doing secure updates on all the IoT devices? We're not just fixing the problem with secure updates. All the problem in IoT at the moment is around how you can get a platform that goes from a vertical solution currently, design your own to a horizontal solution where you get best in class. You look at the way phones they really developed after Android came out. What we're doing is producing a platform where any developer, any OEM then can control their own data, add security to it, add OTA and do full continual integration and testing in the security for 10, 20, 30 years. This has not been done in IoT before. You have a big presence here at the embedded world here. You have a bunch of partners. What you can see over the back is a whole pile of our partners. All these logos were on five or six booths. You'll see us on the ARM booth. You'll see us on the ST booth, the TI booth, the Xilinx booth, the AdLink booth. We have demos and partners now everywhere around this show. Two years ago, we were a small little booth. Now we're a much bigger company. Now we're probably Europe's largest preeminent Linux company in the industry and we're growing because our OEMs are really seeing value as we bring to market. What are your customers saying in terms of realizing their future requests and getting everything that they want in there? You look at all of this. The industry's changing over the next few years. People want to put products in the market for 5, 10, 15, 20 years. They need security now that can be updated and changed and upgraded over a lifetime. That's why OTA becomes important. We're seeing OEMs going. I want to control my data, not give it to the big Cloud guys. I want to be able to have security now and in the future. I want to have critical CVEs that really develop with my business. What we're really seeing is a change in mentality from do-it-yourself to having best-in-class solutions. That's what we're bringing to the industry. How do you manage to support all these things? I think you should get George to do the demos. All right. Let's go around here. Let's see if... Where's George? George. Hang on. George. Demos. How are you, Tyler? Nice to see you. It's been a strange couple of years, no? Yeah. It's been two years. I'll give you a mic after. Okay. Let's continue over there. Are you live streaming? Live streaming. And in the chat, you can write if everything looks good. If the video is good, maybe I'll try to change the shutter speed. So something like this. All right. One, two, three testing. All right. All right. Can you give me one, two, three testing? Yeah. I hear you. Okay. Good. Maybe a little bit higher. You can put the mic just more like on your shirt in the middle. Yeah. All right. Oops. Oh, that little thing. Yeah. If you can kind of clip it on. Thank you. All right. In the chat, maybe the sound is good. Yeah. I need to fix that thing. Sorry. I just said that up. Should be a robot, I should say. Safari sucker. Okay. All right. So here you have a bunch of demos. And what's the latest you want to talk about? Hi, childbikes. Nice to see you again at Embedded World 2022. It's really nice to see everybody here. We've got a bunch of new demos. We've got a big stand. And we're showing one of our new partners, Arduino. There's a mini fleet of Arduino Portenter X8s, which are professional devices. These are for industrial IoT. They're industrial rated. They have security hardware security elements. We have an Intel NUC running our platform that's doing recognition of pedestrians and tracking pedestrians as they walk past our stand. The Arduinos are doing sensors. They have sensors for CO2 sound pressure, temperature humidity, and they're recording those continuously through the show. And we have a continuous update where we're actually updating the operating system firmware. So U-boot on ARM and Trusted Execution Environment, we're updating all of the software on the device over the air. And we're continuously doing that. We've done 342 over-the-air updates today, as you can see on the screen. And of course, I think Ian has showed you the UNU scooter that we have. This is made by UNU Motors in Germany. And they have a fleet of devices that use our software and our platform. And they can over-the-air update these bikes over the air. So very cool. How did you organize to have all these skilled guys involved in taking the latest versions of the software that you're using, making sure that they're even better, improving your thing and pushing everything out? You remember, we've spent a lot of time together at Leonardo. We spun Foundries out of Leonardo. And now we have a very talented group of engineers, both on the engineering side on the core Linux operating system and firmware, but also on the cloud side. And what we're doing is we're providing cloud tooling to manage the development, deployment, and lifetime maintenance of IoT and Edge devices. And this helps our customers get to market faster. It gives them better security because it's all built in with secure over-the-air updates and provides lifetime maintenance and a much lower lifetime software cost. So we're pretty excited. We've got design wins across the industry from tier one companies, including Schneider Electric, to exciting startups, building things like smart shipping containers and robotic vacuum cleaners. So those last two strange years, you've been busy? We've been crazy busy in these last couple of years, and we've been very lucky because we started the company five years ago as a distributed company. So we operate in UK, Netherlands, France, Germany, Spain, Brazil, and the United States. And we've been able to keep working through the last couple of years, but it's really nice to be at a show and an event like this again. It's strange to see other people, no? It's great to see you again. Have you been to some other events already? I started a little bit of business travel at the end of last year. I'm lucky enough to be US and UK citizens, so I was able to go backwards and forwards to the US a little bit. But things have really started to pick up again this year. And on the wall there is some graphic demonstrating a little bit. Yeah, so we have a couple of big graphics. This one is showing, essentially, that we're providing platform as a service software from the cloud to manage your entire software life cycle from the beginning of developing the OS to actually managing the device over the air. So we start with choosing hardware. We help with software development. We have tooling for continuous integration and testing, how to get to secure manufacturing, how to actually secure devices when you start manufacturing them, and then provisioning and managing these devices through their lifetime and updating them through their entire lifetime. And accelerating time to market, increasing security, reducing costs. And then on this one are some of our partners. There's a big ecosystem building in the industry around what we're doing. So a combination of SOC vendors, ODMs, and services partners are helping us establish Foundry's Factories and what we're doing in terms of Linux and the Linux Micro Platform as a kind of standard platform for IoT and Edge devices. So I think we've made a lot of progress since we last saw you. It's also sounding impressive that many of the partners are having your demos also. Yeah, I hope you get a chance to go and see the ARM demo. They're demonstrating Project Cassini on a sort of wall of boards from different SOC vendors. So one of the great things about what we're doing is we're creating this platform that's cross-vendor. So you can use NXP or ST or Xilinx or NVIDIA devices and several others. And you can choose any cloud. You can use private cloud, public cloud. What you do with your data is your own. We're taking care of the core low-level platform. And we're doing it across the industry. All right. And how many guys do you have around in your booth? Oh, here we have a big team. We've bought a seven team. We have seven here. But we're also simultaneously embedded Linux conference in Austin in Texas. So some of the technical team are over there at the same time. But yeah, we're excited to be here. Maybe Tyler's going to speak about some stuff. Tyler's going to talk to you about something technical. All right. Or something else. Who knows? Yeah. All right. Nice to see you again. You can see video I did with Tyler. I'm sorry, I'll get out of your way. No, you're off. No, you're off. Okay. Am I sharp-boxing? Give me a shot. Sharp-axe. Okay. Tyler's getting all mic'd up. All right. What do you want to see? All right. George gave you off. What you've been up to in the last couple of years. We've been building this company out. Foundries, I think George probably gave you a pretty good overview of that. And we've been doing some really neat stuff on security, secure elements, trying to make Linux platforms more secure and more updateable. So are you like in a groundbreaking Linux security level of integration? I don't know if it would be groundbreaking. I think it's all components that we've had for a long time. That we just pulling together, integrating, making sure it works, because that's half the battle of security is that it does it actually work. And then helping productize that solution and helping customers get the market fast. So what are the kind of tech things you would like to show maybe? Yeah. So we have a really neat demo here. At least if I can find the controller. But in this upper right-hand screen here, we have OpenVINO. You can see it's tracking all the pedestrians. Like if you look at the video right now, it's identifying human beings, and then it's tracking their vector of movement. And so it's able to track, you know, hundreds of people walking by our booth every day. And it's, again, it's not even just our mess running on Intel. So we have, you know, ARM support, ARM32 support, Intel support, MIPS, RISC-5, we have all of that now. So to bring your architecture, we probably have a solution for you. What are the stories of some of those things you've been sending back to the community and open source in the last couple of years? Yeah. So we've been doing a lot of OPTE work, and we've been upstreaming a lot of that. So that's all around the security parts. So we have streamed a couple of iSquared C drivers for different security elements on different platforms. And, you know, that's been really good. We've got a lot of people interested in the work that we're doing. And the vendors really appreciate that too, because they should do that as well, and they see us doing it. So they're happy about that. All right. How about your colleagues? Somebody in Brazil? Yeah. So we've got a lot, where Brazil team has grown quite a bit. So we're at 32 people now. I think last time we spoke, we were maybe six or seven. So, yeah, we're growing, got a lot, a lot more customers. Our Brazilian team, we've added three or four folks from Brazil. And yeah, I think mostly Brazilian majority at this point. And you're the CTO? I am the CTO. So you interview everybody that gets hired? I do. Yeah, usually let them go through the tech leads. And then I'm kind of one of the final. So if I'm interviewing you, you most likely are in the final decision phase of being hired. And you're still hiring? We are still hiring. Really kind of niche roles right now. So we do customer support and insecurity. You know, those are the two areas that we're focusing on right now. And customer support is actually embedded engineering. Working with our customers, helping them solve their solutions. So that's actually quite a fun and challenging job. And these guys, some of these guys that you're working with, you know, from in years from the Leonardo? Oh, yeah. No, it's funny walking around here. You see many familiar faces. In fact, you know, Leonardo, obviously, I don't think they have a booth here, but there's some presence around, but there's lots of people at arm that you recognize. But we've all kind of migrated to different companies now. So that whole Leonardo crew is seeding the industry and kind of, you know, creating companies of their own and going to work for new companies. So it's been exciting to see that. Are you tired a little bit of working just of our video chat? I'm joking, but there's been a lot of that in the last couple years. It feels good to be back in person. In fact, I think the last time I saw you, you were at my house and we were interviewing in my backyard. That was before the COVID. It was over before the COVID. So it's good to be back. It's great to see people. I feel like the energy's back again, right? And people are willing to talk and wanting to talk about what we do here at Foundries and how we can collaborate. Is this your first trade show? Oh, no. So I come to embedded role all the time, but that was pre-pandemic. So this is my- Not me. I mean, since. Yeah, yeah. This is the first trade show we've been to since the pandemic. Since 2020. Yep. Been a long time. And what's next? I hear some guys are in Austin. Yeah. So we have a team in Austin. We have at least three guys in Austin, I believe. So we're building out there. United States. We have guys in Portugal. We got lots of folks in Ukraine. Obviously, they're in a tough situation right now. So it's been great being able to work with them and the way they contribute. So yeah, that's hard thing for them to go through, but they are pulling their weight and being awesome engineers. So can't ask for much more than that. I like your cameras. Is this a new camera? Ukraine has pretty much kind of like some of the best engineers, right? Outside of Seattle. Yeah. Well, I mean, no, and to be honest, they're very hardworking people and they're very prideful in the country. So, you know, that combination, you know, they forge really strong engineers and they're great to work with. So we couldn't do it without them, that's for sure. There's a couple of few guys from Ukraine in Linaro before, right? Yeah. Mm-hmm. Yeah. And so I'm sure that's disrupted, you know, the coordination there to some extent. But, you know, all of our Ukrainian employees are in contact with us and still working. And so, you know, the situation's tough, obviously, and they can't be 100% focused on what we do. But, you know, for the most part, they're pulling their weight and contributing and they're awesome people and, you know, I wish their family's the best. Cool. Awesome. So with you and with your colleagues, I'll be going around some other booths later. All right. And showing some. What did you think of our scooter? Oh, this is cool. Did Ian show you the scooter? Yeah, let's talk more about it. Yeah, so this is an Unumotor scooter. This runs two IMX6 MPUs inside of it. It's a fully electric scooter. And a scooter needs to be. So here's the battery right here, you can see inside. And it's hot-swappable. So you can put another secondary battery in here and then swap the battery. How much you can ride with one battery? What's that? You can ride like a bunch with one battery. You know, I haven't got to ride it a whole bunch. I rode it from Nuremberg to here. It goes about 50 or so kilometers an hour. You know, max speed. But it seems like it could get pretty good range. I think this thing has 712 kilometers on it right now. I would assume you probably get at least 50 kilometers out of a battery like this, maybe more. And I guess some of the feature you could do is, in theory, is like bike sharing. Yeah. Well, and what's neat is that this is fully over the air updateable, right? So it's got a cellular modem on it and it's managed, all the telemetry data is managed through the cellular networks. So and aesthetically, it's really nice. I think they've done a good job on the mechanical engineering on this as well. So props to UNU. Oh, and UNU Motors is hiring for an embedded software engineer. So if you're an embedded engineer and listening to this, go to unumotors.com, go to careers and check them out. Are they in Italy? Oh, no, they're in Germany. They're actually here in Germany. So we picked this up in Nuremberg and they allowed us to have it at the show. So how many cool projects are happening with the foundries, factory and everything? Is it like a ton now? Yeah, there's a ton of products in them. You can see our ecosystem here, right? I mean, we're working with just about everybody in the industry that builds a chip. And then we're working with their end customers on their products, making sure that they're secure, they're updatable, and they run the latest software. Cool. All right. So I'll see you later and let's go on the show. Yeah, thanks so much. All right. Cool. Is that a new camera? Oh, thanks a lot. I need to try to fix the sun so it doesn't fall off. Okay, to the live chat. I hope you like this show. I'll just put you on a break for a second. I'll be resuming in a second with the live streaming. Please wait a second if everybody's here. And it'd be nice to get a comment once in a while if everything looks good. Because when I see a statistic on this yellow box pro that says drop frame zero, I'm kind of perplexed while I'm bonding two connections, 5G and 4G, using speedify on the yellow box pro. Kind of hoping that it helps to keep the drop frames and the sound steady. I'll be showing you around all the cool stuff around here. All these guys are going to be interviewed. I would like to try to do five hours per day. We'll see if I can figure out the battery by tomorrow. Because I bought a huge 100 watt power bank. Crazy power bank. But kind of broke the first tablet stand on it. All right. So I'll put you back in a second. Thanks for writing. Looks good for me. But I am on fiber. Oh, fiber is so nice. I've been doing fiber for years. I love speedify. You're using it right now. Oh, speedify. I guess through AWS or something like that. Okay. I'll be back, send back. Walking through the hall here. Now we entering 4A. And if you're watching and you can always go on the a better world website, look at the map. And if there are some companies you think I should check out. Send me the names in the chat. So I don't miss anything in those five hours of live streaming per day. Plus everything is going to get published in 4K60 after. Because I'm recording in 4K60 and editing later. Right now only got two cameras set up. So trying to approach here the NXP booth. I'll put you on hold for a second. Back here trying to find hall five. You think it goes through that way or this way? You know when you think of the opportunities in the world? Sometimes problems. Some people have. It's using technology. You can pretty much solve every problem. That's the reason why I do videos about technology. Hey Avinash. Thanks for watching. Electric scooter please. I'll be getting to the electric scooters. All the electric scooters here. The smart electric scooters connected. Really the planet computers say they will be here. Can you please confirm? If that's true they'll be awesome. They're the coolest British smartphone company. And they pretty much did the dream device. The last one that slides. Astro slide. And I've missed doing videos with them. That's a couple years. So you see there are people in the world still. Do you want to be on the video? I'm fine. You can be just a little bit like this. All right. And what's the booth you're looking for? Two three five. Five two three five. Five two three four is here. Yeah. Two three three. Two three five must be there. What do you think? No no that's one two nine. Is it hole five you want? It should be so near. Adling. All right. Planet will be exhibiting at the better world 2022. Wow. Cool. Please send me a booth number. And I'll be sure to do videos with them. Hole four is perfect. I'll be going there. I'm just going to do a video here. I'll be I'll be connecting back out. This pd5 is really working out. If this is true and if I didn't set the volume wrong. I'm happy in the system. So electric battery you need the price please. For your battery. Which battery? I'm sorry. I got some allergy to live streaming. I'm checking. Not to the live stream. All right. I'll be right here. Whoa. They've got a system going on over there. I'm not going to interfere over there. I'm just going to jump in like this each other. I just want to see what they're doing. See they're also doing a big production right here. I'm just checking it out right from behind. All right. Is it going out live too? No we're recording. Ah recording. Hi Scott. Okay. I'm coming back here. It's like 10 minutes. 10 minutes? Yeah. So do you want to shoot some other stuff? Yeah. And then in 10 minutes we'll be back. Yeah. All right. No problem. All right. So do you have any idea of something right here? Just try to jump on something. Yeah. There's nothing else I want to go to advise. Okay. This for sure a bunch of stuff. And maybe that person that's here is only going to talk about this corner? Yeah. Or that person knows everything about everything? Well from my perspective I'm just going to test it this morning. Yeah. I could screen with a colored line. But yeah if you want to do other stuff then be a... 10 minutes. Yeah. Okay I'll just be around. Yeah. Okay. Okay let's go right here. What do we see on hall number five? Do you want to be on the video? Yeah? All right. Can you type Titus right there? Yeah. And I just unmute you. Can you tip the mic there? Oh sorry this thing it keeps falling off. I'll be right there. All right. Hi so please introduce yourself. Hello I'm Ferdinand Cremus business development manager of iBasis. iBasis is one of the biggest EOSC SIM card providers. It's very easy you put one SIM card of iBasis inside the device and it can change to any operator everywhere in the global world. How does that work? Basically we have profiles on the SIM card EOSC profiles and we can change it over the air from T-Mobile in Germany to Verizon in the United States for example. Any SIM card in the whole world but you need the carrier to agree to be part of your system? We don't have an agreement with all the operators in the world yet but we can provide global coverage and basically especially for embedded world it's very interesting. You put our chip our MFF2 on the circuit board and you can export your device to any country in the world. Do you have a picture that shows how it works? How do you put it on the board? Is it physically on the embedded system? It's physically on the modem. Yeah you can put it on a modem it's integrated then it's an iSIM but we put it as a chip on the circuit board or in a regular SIM card. And here are some examples you talk about transportation, healthcare, tracking, semiconductor, smart cities. One of the customers is a horse tracking company. It's used in the horse tracking around the world and what they like about iBasis is the company is called McCloud is that iBasis can provide connectivity everywhere. So basically in the tracking device they put the SIM card and it connects everywhere. We also have a healthcare solution that in the United States some areas you have coverage with T-Mobile, other areas with Verizon. Our SIM card can deal with all the operators so you're independent of operators as well. How do you program the SIM card? Over the air we can change profiles for the real in-depth technicians. We use a subscription management system and we can we have commands and logic to change the profiles over the air. You have logic in the SIM card? No it's outside of the SIM cards but according to the logic the SIM card profile the credentials the keys on the card can change. You've been doing this for a long time? We started six years ago the technology was not earlier available. We're now at the second release of the system and recently we acquired Symphony that is providing management software to do it even smarter than before. And you have a whole team here? We have a whole team here Joachim from Legacy Symphony, Ronald from Symphony, Frank Smouter who is also doing product management on other products and at me. And you've been to many embedded worlds before? It's the second year actually Frank visited embedded world last year. He got so enthusiastic about it that he said we need to be here so now we are. You were at the virtual event? No the last fiscal one. There was something happening yeah? Yeah so I was here at the last fiscal event. Ah the 2019? Yes. Ah 2020? 20 yeah and I'm glad yeah that was the very last event and I'm glad it's fiscal again and we can meet. It's been a strange couple of years. Yes it is. I forgot where I am yeah cool all right thanks a lot. I'm going to give you my card where you can see the video will go there and then if you want you can send some description I can split the video out but it was live streaming. Yeah with 5G and 4G bonding I'll try it. Okay that's why you knew what you were asking that was pretty clear. What did you say? It was pretty clear you knew what you were asking. Yeah actually Ronald Symphony is a broadcasting company. Yeah sir. He's using bonding technology. Ah you're also using bonding? I bond with my friends but no I mean in typical route technology you can bond very simple. Yeah it's just my I need to activate a shotgun microphone also because right now it's just these little staples. Okay thanks a lot. Thanks move away. Let's go back right here. So I'm washing my hands once every week right now. Thanks for the comment. See if they're ready here the ad link. I'm supposed to be back 10 minutes. Is it 10 minutes? It's not yet. Oh is that the person doing video? Hey was it still waiting a little bit more? Ah is this meeting here? Okay I'll be back no problem. Let's try to get out this way. Thank you. Somebody came filming. Let's go there. Yeah I need to stabilize my selfie camera. I see that you can see I'm just jumping like a horse. Anybody still watching? I wonder. Been streaming for an hour really. And the YOLO Box Pro is at 46% power. I took like 10% of the power before starting. Hey do you want to be in the video? Can I do an interview? Yeah just this thing is just a little bit falling off you can try to put it on. So is it is it possible so both of us could be here? Yeah it's just if who wants to start to talk? It's just if you can share this. So okay hold on what's the interview going to be about? Whatever you want to talk about your company. I put on live stream but it's also for later. All right yeah okay I can start. Okay I'll just hold it here. All right let me just... And we hear the Embedded World. Hi. Hello. Hello I'm Jakub from Conclusive Engineering. We're a professional services company in Embedded Software and Hardware. And we have just entered product market with our three products. Single bolt, two single bolt computers and one system on module. So what do you do? So sorry so the first bolt over here is a system on module based on microchip polar fire SOC plus FPGA. So that's a pretty... Risk five. Risk five yes that's a risk five and an FPGA in a single SOC. We have LPDDR4 over here and you know basically an evaluation platform for this module. So that's basically it. The other bolt over here is an NXP layer scape based SBC. This platform is basically designed to as a you know edge computing platform something more related to like high speed networking and stuff like that. And the other the other bolt we have over here is a small single bolt computer. It's a very tiny IoT board based on the microchips some 8027. So this basically this particular board is actually very interesting because it's capable of running Linux and it draws below one watt of power under a full load. So that's basically a lineup of devices we have right now on the market. And besides of that we're also like a coup set a professional services company. So we can do custom hardware custom software and any modifications of the hardware you have seen over here. Where you based? So we are based in Poland Katowice. Our company has been founded in 2018. And we have started basically from the developing custom solutions for our customers. And we are basically entering the embedded hardware market with our products like basically right now we have started developing our platforms basically last year. And you actually develop development boards you do the board design. Yes yes we are doing board design. Everything you see over here is custom designed in Poland by us. All boards are also assembled in Poland. So we are not doing the manufacturing in China. We are doing everything locally in Poland. So the whole IP the BSPs and the software support is all comes from us. There's some nice SMT machines in Poland. Yeah yeah but we are basically using an external facility to basically assemble the PCBs. How would you say is the quality on a product like this? How's the reliability? How long is it going to lifetime support be and everything? So basically so for example this board it's pretty early in a development stage. So those Polarfire SOC chips are still engineering samples. So for this I suppose it's going to be the longest on the market because we cannot even source the target chips yet. The NXP layerscape I guess I don't know at least five or ten years from now. I think NXP claims at least 10 years of support going on from now because those chips were introduced in 2018, 17 or 18 and at least 15 years from the time of introduction they will be still supported. And speaking of microchip, microchip has a longevity policy that any chip will be manufactured as long as there are customers for it. So they don't claim that it will be supported for 10, 15 or 20 years but instead they are just claiming hopefully infinite support for any of those ICs. So as long as the chip is supported you will support the board? Yes exactly and let me say this we have a few customers who already wanted like longevity team declarations from us and we claim at least 10 years support for each board that we have on the shelf. All right how big is your team? Our team is like 30 people and it's composed of embedded software engineers, hardware engineers and also some marketing people and UI UX designers. So basically our story is like this, we have started by doing like custom embedded software and hardware solutions and since we have accumulated experience needed to design our own boards we said why not try with our own products and this is why we are here today. And how do you like the embedded world like the industry? Well it's a great pleasure to be here and meet with people from all the industry. There are several companies we work with at the moment who are also there and we have the chance to meet with them and meet basically in person, talk to our suppliers, talk to our customers. Yeah so we like it a lot basically. Cool thanks a lot. All right. And do you have a lot of cool projects for the future? Well so what we're missing at the moment is some multimedia based single board computer or some a lot of people come here and ask do you have something with a beefy GPU and we say it's unfortunately not at the moment. So I definitely the next thing in our lineup will be a single board computer or a system on module with some multimedia features like video processing and GPU. That's a lot of things to support. Yeah well I think we can manage to support it. For example right now our call board lineup uses one base Linux kernel that is supported in the same version for all three of them and we try to have like best-in-class software support. So we managed it by unification of our BSPs. So like all the three boards that we support come with like one Ubuntu-based BSP and one pretty new Linux kernel based on series 5.16. Cool. All right. That's nice. Awesomeness keep it coming in better hardware. This is one of the comments. Cool. All right. So people can find more on your website. And all the details there. Okay. Thank you very much. Thanks. All right. Let's switch back. Did I give you my card right? If you want you can check out the I'll split out your videos separately. It's live also. Okay. And you're going to assemble some video. Yeah I can take it out of the live and put it separate. And you can spread it around. Thanks a lot. Thanks. Oh nice. Thanks for finding me. I was just around. Yeah. I need to find a good USB cable so I can keep this charged because I forgot one of my USB cables at type C cable. Maybe you have some at the booth. Maybe I'm sure Tyler has some. I forgot to ask him because I'm only at 40 percent. Hey how are you? Yes it is. Can I give you this? Okay. All right. Yeah. Oh this little thing I need to see if I've lost it. One second. The Foundry's demo. Talk about that. Maybe wonder around. Talk a bit more about Adlink as well who you are. So this piece we're going to record. We want something to be good for Foundry's but also be right back. Okay. So if you want to go on about What's the viewing angle? So is it very narrow or the viewing angle? It's wide. Okay. So I'll just start recording right here. And we hear at the embedded world. Hi. Hey. Hi. I'm Richard Pinnell. I'm a business development manager for computer and modules for Adlink. We are right now on the embedded world 2022 here on the embedded booth and it's a pleasure to introduce that Foundry's and Adlink that we teamed up together to really create something new to the market. I mean we brought together unique pieces of hardware so basically a computer on modules and we bring this together with the Foundry software stack. And yeah let's have a look on the demo. So this is the live demo. Here you can see our iMix 8M Plus solution. It's a smart module on the carrier board and a very nice enclosure and on the module there's the Foundry stack up and running. So and yeah we joined forces to really reduce our customer's pain in order to really provide the software stack which is really secure. Secure all of a lifetime and this is basically the idea. So what you see here this is a sensor. The sensor is gathering data like humidity and so on and this application is running on the Foundry software stack and yeah Adlink and Foundry we joined forces and we made the Foundry's factory available on our platforms. So you can use all the Foundry services on all our computer on modules but this is just an example. I mean the iMix 8M Plus it's really a common target in the embedded industry but it's not limited to this specific target. As you can see here we are supporting, we have many different starter kits here. We support the RB5 by Qualcomm, the A-Cut Lake, the PX30 Rockchip and of course the iMix 8M Plus and furthermore on platforms. Yeah maybe let's have a look on the entire computer on module portfolio. On the left you should use a little bit the company how long time you've been doing this business. So Adlink we have our 25th anniversary so we're in the embedded business since 25 years and yeah we are really proud to be part of the embedded industry for such a long time and yeah of course. Nice so we're doing a tour now. Okay what is the latest stuff you're showing at the embedded world? So maybe let's start at entry-level compute briefly go through a SMARC then we go over the inter-aircraft lake solutions on COM Express on SMARC and in particular it's COM Express type 10 and COM Express type 6 compact. What you see here is our COM Express solutions so it's the Intel outer lake solution which is the latest Intel platform that's supported at the moment complimented by the Tiger Lake, the Tiger Lake UP3 on COM Express Compact and the V2000 by AMD. So and this is really a comprehensive computer module portfolio and the best of it is that really foundries scales across all those targets so you can really manage a fleet of multiple devices not just limited on ARM it is available on x86 of course too and this is really nice you have a single point of contact you really have up-to-date software ready to use in your application or your application. So the partnership with the foundries is enabling you to step up in terms of providing long-term support packages everything is secure for a long time. What's the biggest selling point? Yeah I mean most importantly security doesn't stop at hardware right we made hardware as secure as doable but it's not just about hardware hardware it's just one piece it's about software too. I mean we are talking about the entire stack which is running on the hardware and both in combination the hardware and the software really makes the difference in order to make the pace so we are awaiting in the next one or two years some further more strict regulations that embedded applications and products really need to be secure and we are really making this happen together with our hardware solutions which are secure together with Foundry stack. Nice and you have expertise in x86 in the ARM world and you do all the best solutions in there? Yes of course I mean what you see here our entire solution is scaling from ARM over entry-level x86 through high-end x86 and the most performance at the moment on a computer on larger standard you can get on comhpc this is really something new to the market and again it's x86 in ARM and we can cover both targets with the Foundry stack and that's great. And what's with the SMARC module over there? Okay I see Qualcomm logo, MediaTek? So these two are our brand new modules based on the Qualcomm RB5 and the MediaTek 1200 SoC both have AI performance incorporated so it has 15 tops of AI performance on board and five tops of performance on the MediaTek solution and it has a lot of interfaces to attach VPCs, i-cameras and so on. This is really a unique selling point and with these SoCs we are really entering high performance compute on SMARC which is really the entry level of our product line and yeah so entry level but it's also very powerful performance, good performance even though you call it entry level. I mean SMARC is famous because I mean it's very small right and but those SoCs providing a huge density on a SMARC module so it's within the 12 watt thermal envelope I would call it as high performance compute on an envelope of maximum 12 watts and that's something great for applications where you really need to get rid of the heat and and so on and yeah where you're limited to a design. What are these atom solutions right there? What you can see here I mean this is our entry level x86 solution based on the Intel Elcat Lake so the first one is our SMARC module the next one is the Nano XAL it's based on ComExpress type 10 and this one is type 6 compact. I mean we offer the Elcat Lake CPU on those multiple footprints because the attention is of course that we are providing upgrade paths for our clients regardless if they started with type 10, type 6 or with the SMARC module. And what are these boxes we see there? So these are our deep learning accelerated platforms and these are off-the-shelf box PCs we can specifically tailor to our clients needs potential applications are robotics it is a transportation and you can simply add on for instance NVIDIA graphic cards to really boost their number crunching abilities and that's really something great it's a modular approach you can simply open it close it add more features modify the IO cheer this is really a kind of family concept. And you have a big booth here can we walk around? Yes of course so please have a look on our Ampere Ultra developer platform this is an enabler for autonomous applications so what you see here this is really a beast it features up to 80 cores and this is really groundbreaking I mean it's a lot of CPU performance on a very on a very nice computer on module design so it's basically comhpc server type module inside with a reference carrier in this nice housing to enable engineers to getting started to collaborate and to work on the selfie framework very efficiently this is one of the most powerful on processors ever no it is so it is really something unique and uh yeah remarkable how long did it take your company to work with them get this work to work I would say multiple years partnership it was very fast I mean we've been very committed to make this fly I would say we're we made it in a very short period of time from initial concept to the first pilot run and to the first product and we're reaching mass production very soon so that we can offer this in higher quantities and on the right hand side at the complementary product you can see you can team up this solution of course with a graphic card solution for instance provided by NVIDIA and this is our offering on the right hand side 80 link is a strategic partnership it's in the strategic partnership with NVIDIA so we have a very strong collaborations what you can see here is on the Pascal during an ampere solutions based on the latest GPUs on the MXM form factor of course so it's not pickboard pick hard it's MXM form factor and it really helps to make a system secure and not secure and rocked against shock and vibration for instance this is very important so uh where you where you based all the employees were there so we have really a global footprint I mean our headquarters is in Taiwan so but we have local um or we have regional business units to really provide local to a local support this is very important for us hey let's have a quick chat about our reference carriers I mean if you want to start with a computer model it's always important to really have a reliable reference design so means you can simply add a computer module here start evaluating it as a very good starting point to design your own carrier board and this is a reference design who makes kinetics available in order that clients really can copy and paste for instance a lot of a lot of our design in-dater to really shorten time to market yeah all right there we have and uh let's walk through where you want we can walk around this way I'm not quite sure if it makes yeah it's just to check out the boost like this so this uh how how's your your presence in Germany what do you mean how much activities do you have going on in Germany um you have offices yes I mean our main office is in Mannheim so and um there are dedicated field application engineers project management support insights here to really make new projects fly very fast here we have some use cases this is our reliable autonomous driving perception platform based on multiple cameras interface to the ROSQ very important a box PC in our lineup and yeah here for instance we have object detection no computer and modules are passing by and they will be identified in real time what you see here and a very nice use case here you can see 5G small cell solutions based on 1U and 2U server equipment in 19 inch and here transforming railway equipment based on PCI express a compact PCI equipment um yeah what you can see basically here so maybe we can move here all right somebody's interfering with the wireless mic a little bit okay okay okay that's not but I think maybe it's better now okay as far as I can hear it all right and maybe we can film this wall yeah because um from the message it's very important yeah what this shows the history yeah this shows basically the history of a dealing in open compute consultions like compact PCI advanced tca pix etx then um in 2017 um com express started um pc 104 um and then very important is smarck and comhpc which are the latest on computing uh on modules and which are very important to us and yeah all in all as I said earlier today I mean we have more than 25 years of experience in embedded and uh yeah we're really um more proud of you to be part of of the business since such a long time and to support our clients best to make their embedded projects uh run very fast and reliably and uh how does it feel to be in a real show it's great to be honest I mean it's been a while well it's been a while we all were waiting for the moment to get in contact with people again I mean we all really enjoy to get in contact again face by face share some ideas um have some spontaneous reactions it's really great to getting together again and um yeah all right thanks a lot hey okay thanks cool right there guys on the live chat I heard the sun was jumping just a little bit right there's anything wrong you can let me know okay cool thanks a lot I think it's great let me give you my card okay I'm going to cut it or can I see it somewhere later on or is this a live station we should be back right now did I disconnect the sound okay can you hear me oh probably has it okay real life sorry okay so hi so uh we did a video before COVID yeah three years ago um so you were writing books I was the embedded uh yep so I did mastering embedded learning programming uh for parks publishing which is still uh it's in its third edition it's in its third edition uh selling pretty well um yeah it was cut front to right and um it's connected here uh there it is yeah great to be back at embedded world after uh two years and um yeah it's just great to be just wandering around seeing all the people finding out all kinds of things which um you know I didn't know about it's just great to be back in person and not just looking at the tv screen all the time and uh seeing people again it's funny to see that people are still there right in the world yeah yeah yeah it's just like it just like it always has been um so yeah just being talking to some people about uh flatter for embedded systems which is very interesting um gotta check that out just talking to the guys over at foundries.io about their system there's so much stuff going on around here it's incredible how do you find people talking about flutter is there a flutter booth yeah yeah um yeah for google no no no it's uh uh k-dub laps they're just over there what do you call it kane k-dub I think it's k-dub oh don't quote me can you show me where they are yeah yeah sure follow me um because flutter is it's kind of like the dream platform that I've been hoping would be really working out and useful and that google wouldn't kill and keep it going and yeah and uh like one code base for everything yeah it's the idea right so but now it's um attractive for embedded systems because uh it's an alternative to to cute to cutie um has a very attractive licensing um is cost platform develop ones deploy blah blah blah it's got everything you need so yeah pretty good I'm not exactly sure if I can find exactly which booth they were on so you may have to wait for a moment well I just find I think yeah it's over there by the open strategy thanks for that follow me because I would have never found it because I wouldn't know where to look I just look everywhere yeah I just stumbled across them so the weird thing is that I'd never really thought about flutter for embedded uh until yesterday and somebody started talking about it um actually the uh found found is the IO guys and then somebody else is talking about it uh today I thought well this is really something I could check this out so then I turn around and then I say the booth but yeah it's a neat way of developing um kind of brings together kind of mobile world and embedded world um yeah I've not tried it myself but it sounds like a great idea I'm trying to bring bring up just on the end here thanks so it's uh it's kind of one of the coolest conferences of the year no a better world there we go what do you think a better world is the fun place for you yeah yeah it's fantastic so it the great thing is coming here I can see everybody meet everybody I need to know um so I do this uh this conference I was to do FOSDEM which is a totally different thing but FOSDEM in Brussels in February is always a good thing to be as well purely purely open source did they have a show last February uh virtual a virtual not not an in-person show but I'm hoping we'll do a um a real show uh next February so Brussels is always nice lots of Belgian waffles lots of Belgian beer it's a great place to be and um it's nicer to have a real show than this virtual stuff right yeah the virtual thing didn't really work uh at least not for me because you don't get these chance encounters with people in the corridors you just go to the to the presentation you're gonna go to uh nobody really talks that much there's not very much kind of interaction um whereas in person you know we are a social being social beings and so people want to talk to each other and you go to the pub you can go out to the bar in the evening and and continue the conversations some kinds of things come up some of them relevant some of them not relevant cool awesome okay was there anything else you'd like to talk about what's your latest project uh okay so uh basically I do training classes I teach people android um how to build android systems and how to build android automotive systems so that's basically what I do and the latest thing is I'm trying to set up some kind of community which I'm behind android uh open source project AOSP so I have the android sorry I have the AOSP and AAOS meetup group it's impossible to pronounce uh but it's a place to get together for people doing AOSP work and also android automotive OS which is AAOS so it's the AOSP and AAOS meetup so anybody interested in those things join me there and it's in real life uh so it's a meetup it's a virtual meetup because everybody's scattered around uh different parts of Europe and different parts of the world so it has to be but we are doing we're doing a in-person meetup this evening at 6 p.m it's entirely booked up so no free places but we do occasionally do in-person meetups on the next one probably will be at FOSDEM in February 2023 where are you based I'm in Winchester in southern England but most of my work is is across Europe Germany France Sweden Portugal etc cool thanks okay nice to see you here cool right up to have a let me give you my card again see so you can check it out this is a one hour and 40 minutes into the live stream you'll be able to see but I'll split it out I can I can call it the walking around with Chris Simmons at the embedded world this video cool let me see talk to these guys these guys are really interesting cool thanks a lot okay have fun okay have a fun show can I make a video with you with him it's possible so it will be him or you yeah okay let's see if I can be right here okay I'll try to see if they want to be a video you have another idea where I should film yeah let's go to ST yeah okay let me just give me my card to give you my card so if you want you can contact me let me know when I should come by and I can live stream it and interview and everything okay cool you have a GPS on me how you can find me yeah I am the only guy walking around with this weird stuff okay I need to get a stabilized selfie video one of these was a hyper smooth I was thinking to use a gopro but I saw that these gopros have a lag oh yeah and it's hard to synchronize the sound so I thought hey let's just use the smartphone as a HDMI source oh I'll go over to the gimbalized stabilized I'll just take the HDMI only cute nice sorry I thought I was on this sound is good somebody wants me to check out the nxp booth we'll be filming them for sure hey I'm back yeah it's a little bit funny system that I've got I should try to show you what it looks like I'll try to do it right now but it's hard to do with this little thing there it's too short actually so here I have the Yolo box pro and it's connected to a bunch of stuff behind here I've got my main camera I got a 100 watt power bank wireless microphone that cuts out when I get next to other wireless microphones I need to figure out how to get a perfect microphone system I guess just with the cable and my autofocus panasonic on a rebuild s and it's got an arm connected to my body because this is the heavy stuff I don't want to carry it around without this arm that I have I need to uh yeah show you better what's going on here this uh let's come back down here it's a 5g modem down there the ZTE M5001 and it's bonded with a built-in 4g LTE that's in the Yolo box pro using speedify and that's the kind of hope that I had that it would kind of work I don't know if it's working I hope it's working and it keeps telling me that my Yolo box is running out of power because the connector is not perfect I really need to try to make sure that it stays connected so I am at the nxp booth I'm trying to set up the interview right now and I just need to check if they'll be happy to be on video and then we can tour the nxp booth we'll be doing uh ST on Thursday I got the booth tour going on with them definitely filmed with with Nordic semiconductor silicon labs is over there um infineon everything is going on here it's a bunch of stuff that hopefully we can get filmed with there's a candero over there maybe I'll go hang out to them for five minutes you'd be happy to be on video yeah sure I just want to make sure I knew what I was talking about and at least that you know are you happy to also do a tour a little bit we can start yeah we can start talking about this the latest latest chips all right it's gonna be cool yeah let me just sorry it needs to be turned on right there okay I'm getting power to the yellow box it's working excellent Rubik's Cup damn this is so damn cool yeah hard to believe it's live video all right it's gonna happen right now let's do a tour at the nxp what do you think we should start filming let's start maybe there and go around uh yeah you're pointing it down this puzzle might point it up yeah maybe you can put it on that side of your shirt yeah like this perfect yeah and okay it's so hi brazil uh so I'll I'll start like this where did he go uh I'll just one second by the way I did have a question though yeah where did uh rick go rick rick ah rick there okay it's not going to be in a video right oh I don't know I just uh you can introduce yourself if you want you can mention the the foundries so you officially have a partnership right we I think so yeah no I mean I know we do yeah yeah and then and then we can hopefully talk about your latest chips what's been happening last couple years what's groundbreaking what's the coolest new technologies right okay and then we can film around the booth a little bit yeah do you mind okay so it's not about the foundries I oh we can start with the foundries and then uh because then they'll be they'll be happy okay what's the audience sponsoring my video what do you say who's the audience or who is this uh so it's live streaming to like I don't know how many people are watching and then later I'll be uh as a separate video you know I'll be uh I'll be like uh I've got 80 million views on YouTube so we can I can split it out there's another video okay okay let's try all right all right well uh so I'm just working with nxp I just start recording hi cool hey so we're at embedded world Nuremberg uh I'm Justin Mortimer I work in the edge processing business at nxp as the global technical marketing manager so yeah it's exciting to be here events great um good turnout you know I've come for a number of years should we walk around yeah all right so uh let's take a look at the booth um you know we're we're doing a lot of different things um not just at nxp but really with our partners you know a big part of it is building solutions for our customers as a team with our partners for example the company like fondries IO where we build you know secure operating systems for our customers for all of you really to be able to access the great features of the device and to do it in a fast way to get to market you know things things like this and so what we're doing here is really demonstrating uh some really great technologies we built at nxp and we've really brought to life and enabled with our customers or with our partners I should say for example we've done a number of different things around graphics you know we have some partner tier where we've enabled graphics on a microcontroller we have different operating systems that we're showing embedded boards you know we have really really a nice ecosystem of embedded board partners both on the processor side for example here we have toradex we have tq here we are also enabling wi-fi so we have a marata based solution so it's really uh an exciting ecosystem that we're developing this one in particular is quite nice this is the latest solution to market on idotamex 8m mini uh from arduino it's the portenta solution actually we spent a lot of time enabling that together with fondries IO so here I think is a great solution that just came to market that we're excited to uh to be able to launch and announce here uh and bring to market then it says PSA certified you want to do long term support security updates everything yeah so I mean it all starts it all starts with the 8m mini so the 8m mini um has security kind of built at its core but and so we've did we've done PSA PSA is a certification a platform security architecture but you know here we have hardware and software support and enablement from a PSA standpoint from uh from a fondries IO standpoint they've taken the software and they do the BSP release to provide uh customers with a fast time to market what's interesting to me is I think with arduino is the breadth of customers that we get to now really start engaging with with the 8m mini it's something that we're extremely excited to be able to do uh and yeah we've been looking forward to bringing this product to market with arduino for for a while so it's exciting exciting new board um to get to show off here at embedded world cool um yeah so so what are the latest coolest nxp chipsets that's been happening over the last couple of years or maybe what are you launching at this show yeah well so we've launched um uh a number of new things actually from from the low end microcontrollers we've uh we've announced recently mcx so mcx is our newest line of microcontrollers we're blending together wireless connectivity low power security mixed signal analog uh so we're demonstrating mcx over here um recently we expanded i.mxrt so rt is an extremely popular cortex m7 based mcu but here with with i.mxrt you know we can do multi access motor control um but also there's now more and more industrial communication inside the device so we have a gigabit ethernet enabled in rt 1170 and not only that but we're also now starting to build a secure solution so here with with rt 1170 we're going to complete iec 62443 for the complete system level certification yeah yeah sorry i'm chopping in yeah so what do we see here this is so it's sorry to excuse us here um application level block diagram i mean you can see it's we've really built a whole system level solution here um doing the multi access motor control servo control uh we've taken advantage of the secure element we have analog front end so we've really taken all the best components from nxp to build a really nice industrial control system nice um so you know i mean and if you think the applications that it can enable are pretty broad so it's not just you know factory automation but i think this will be a really nice platform that we can bring into a broader market um we're building some nice uh solutions here whether it be for voice enablement um we have solutions for access control so like smart touchless access into a home or a building um yeah so we're taking all the all the components you know across nxp you know from a hardware and a software standpoint including system level solutions for voice enabling technology and bringing it into a platform to help customers get to market quicker and that's really what this is all about really when will the mcx product line be available commercially mcx that's a great question so mcx we announced about a week ago and we plan to start enabling customers in the second half of this year uh we plan to start enabling customers in october and we'll go to full production um in the first part of next year q1 2023 so it's a high performance aren't cars yeah so what we what we're using here yeah it's a great question mcx currently is going to be based on the cortex m33 which gives about a 20 percent uplift in performance efficiency over the cortex m3 and m4 um and then we're using the cortex m7 for the i.m xrt which is uh what we're doing with the multi-axis motor control okay so so uh all this is exciting news for the industry yeah yeah we're people have a lot of ideas what to do with these yeah so i mean really there's a number of um applications that are enabled um you know we we we work with customers around the world whether it be in the home building factory medical applications but i think it's for us it's all about bringing technology to the masses and enabling and making technology more accessible uh so we're really excited to be able to launch these new products and get them in the hands of more and more engineers around the world um and there's a whole lot of innovation happening so for us it's about bringing innovation you know to a broad base of engineers and really see what the potential is for really edge edge applications you know and you know what can you do with all this technology at the edge without needing to go to the cloud for example um and and to do it in a way that's both energy efficient you know and and secure and so for us we're putting a lot of technology into the products to help to help to do that and really to do that with our partners as well so all right there's a robot going on there yeah uh you want to use your thing some drone some video yeah so we have a we have a team of people that are really building a lot of great great products and you know this one being it being pretty cool it's fall so it's tracking we have we have some technology that allows the device to follow in so we're doing you know ranging with UWB so he can track pretty in a in a very precise way um with our UWB technology so everything across nxp's company is uh is is taken advantage of you know whether it be the automotive grade microcontrollers or you know our our lineup of processors uh to really help make this UWB ultra wideband ultra wireless technology so he's got a thing in the bucket that yeah exactly i didn't even describe it well yeah so so there's ultra wideband technology is helping to do the ranging and and in order to track him around the booth but you can i mean you can imagine the breadth of technology applications that you could use you know use this type of technology and uh this is just an example although we are doing um we do have design contests you know so we have we have like for example the hover games and we'll do other design contests with the technology to help make sure you know and customers and engineers around the world can take advantage of it what's the npu and the mcx product line will it be based on the ethos u 55 uh that is a great question uh initially we're going to be using the cortex m 33 m 33 all right yeah uh if live chat has any other questions please go ahead what else do we mix miss at the booth yeah so we have of course our we have some automotive solutions here um you know that you know whether it be battery management systems in the vehicle we have um i mean these are these are pretty fun you know i think so we you know with for example with google google released a coral board so it's about doing kind of machine learning at the edge but with a microcontroller so there's a number of different add-on boards to the base rt 1170 solution from coral with the integrated tpu on onboard so this is doing some really nice kind of people counting and and detection you know you know with the with the onboard camera but we have a number of embedded board partners i think one thing that's pretty popular this year is uh machine vision and embedded vision so you know whether it be you know with i mean in this case here we're doing a camera solution with rt i dot mx rt 1170 um but we're also doing um a lot of machine vision embedded vision with our processors so for example here verisite verisite built the 8m plus and here we have an integrated isp the image signal processor that we've connected to a camera in order to enable machine vision with our embedded processor um but yeah seiko i wave a number of different solutions here how would you describe the partnership with these board designers yeah i mean they always work very yeah i mean we have a great yeah i mean for us as we big we bring processors we build processors for the industrial mass market i mean that's really what we do and in order to do that well we have great relationships with the embedded board partners and these are just a few i mean if you just walk around embedded world you'll see embedded boards everywhere and at the heart of many of them is our industrial grade i dot mx processors and you know the relationship's great we're going to continue to build on that relationship and continue to do more and more new products and new boards that we can bring and launch into the market with our partners so you know it's exciting to see all the technology that people are building with these new processors and frankly how our customers can use them in their applications um you know whether it be you know industrial hmi medical devices you know cloud enabled machine vision machine learning so yeah a lot of a lot of good stuff coming from all of our partners and these these frankly are just a few for example we met with phytec earlier they were around the corner in hall five uh phytec is doing some really good stuff um they're they have a number of i dot mx eight base solutions and embedded boards this one being the 8m plus using the 8m plus here because they they take advantage of the gpu and the isp but they all they'll go all the way down and build an i dot mx rt base solution as well so it's yeah it's it's this one question here about uh is the camera solution using tiny ml we do have tiny ml ported onto uh onto some of our mcs so yeah yeah we can definitely take advantage of tiny ml from google there yep cool yeah yeah all right so and this by the way is the cortex m7 it's that one there is not a cortex a processor you do a lot of uh heterogeneous uh getting different cores to do different tasks yeah yeah i mean i that's a big part of what we do in in uh in our group is multi multi core right so whether it's you know uh i dot mx which has cortex m and cortex a or whether there's a dual core inside like for example the cortex m7 based rt 1170 guy uh so that's everything you've been talking about is ai i mean yeah i am learning and ai is really kind of proliferating across our business i would say the one that's really got more mainstream applicability would be the 8m plus so there we have a machine learning accelerator but that's really just the first device we're going to have more and more solutions with embedded accelerators there all right and sometimes when you promise 10 years or 15 years life you actually deliver more than that yeah yeah good question so we extended our 10 year longevity to be 15 year so and you can check out on nxp.com we have a 15 year longevity program and it really just goes back to the earlier commitment i was saying we're focused on the industrial mass market in addition to automotive and medical and everything else 15 years is critical but we often go far beyond 15 years so yeah thanks a lot thanks cool all right thanks yeah sure live stream yeah let me give you my card okay cool so it was like two hours into the video okay i'll i'll split it out as a separate video i'll also okay cool yeah that's good cool i didn't realize what we were doing sorry about that yeah no problem yeah just go here for a second i'll be right back in live chat please wait a second so trying to get to another booth next booth and checking out your your chat like me to film with the silicon labs we'll try to find them but now i'm going over to silencs the embedded world is back it's uh cool to see uh people again it looks different than Netflix for sure sorry do these jokes let's switch to this camera i'm trying to walk into walls and stuff it's yeah i'm looking at my 5g router to see if it's oh there's one cable disconnected i need to get a better ethernet cable it's one of the things i forgot to bring my little ethernet cables i see texas instruments over there we're walking next to avanet let's see what silencs is up to startup area well the startups ti i'll try to definitely do video with them so everybody watching i'm trying to do five hours of live stream per day on my crazy 5g 4g bonding setup multi-camera system there's a lot of danish booth around here but i don't know where they are right now this is good exercise for me because the last couple years it's been netflix and amazon prime it's not a lot of exercise what is the number you say two eight three eight two three nine yeah i definitely need to do an embedded show floor map so uh you can see where i'm in the halls and help me go left go right to find a different booth here's amd and epson hey yeah we just cannot find some no ink scam some ink screens it's gonna happen there's ink everywhere there's ink right there over there there's ink in my pocket go see the renaissance booth there you can see my demonstrator hey sven kronman i'm gonna do video with you later okay so is this where xilinx is hanging out yeah are they did i forget some merger did i miss out on something yes there was ah so amd is xilinx yeah well xilinx is amd oh cool so we've been working with john and his team sometime all right so we'll right now i think we're officially done for the day all right so i'll try to grab them uh when whatever you can so i try to film i just swing back to amd and ask if they want to talk about the xilinx foundry solutions i'll try are you doing stuff with the ab net okay i don't think they have anything okay we'll sync up who knows about us so that's fine okay uh if you wouldn't need to see where i am you just watch the live stream yeah you can see where i am actually you don't need the gps tracker so just go to your youtube channel yeah if i still have the battery working hopefully i do okay i'm gonna try to check if texas instruments has somebody i can film with yeah thanks a lot yeah i'll be on time i think maybe ian and george want to do some more videos for like uh as we're doing this press tour okay uh some local journalists so they want to do something just for the journalists who won't be nice so they can be watching this yeah and that's cool okay thanks a lot to see you tomorrow morning let me see if i can uh contact but i'll put you on standby so i don't live stream somebody who doesn't want to be live streamed love to see if xilinx has anything related to rf suck we'll check we'll check okay let me see if somebody wants to be filmed here uh so if any of you have ideas what i should be asking ti if i do get to do an interview with them you can shoot the questions in the live chat but we'll see if i can find somebody who wants to be in video i'm just gonna try to put you on the pause again for a second sorry about that but i don't want to be and uh we're back right here so okay all right hi i'm martin maginski i'm the general manager for sitara mpu here at texas instruments and we're going to do a little walkthrough on some of the cool demos we have here at embedded world today um so we're actually going to start out over here talking a little bit about electrification and how we're helping make the world a better place through power efficiency and eb charging technology uh so in this particular case we have our latest aim six two product which combines connectivity human machine interaction and power grid management all into a single soc to help reduce power consumption dry power efficiency right and help the world get more electrified and by result make it a greener place but what makes this really unique is all of the integration that this the ti processors bring together in a single small package uh at half the power that it traditionally takes what's happening there uh yeah so here we're actually simulating a car uh so what you can see here you know typically you would have a charger plugged into the car in this case this computer is actually simulating the car um and what's happening is over this wire there's a communication standard talking between the car and the eb charger to make sure that the charging happens safely and that efficiently right and uh that you get your charges quickly as possible nice uh are you using new chipsets for that yeah absolutely so this is the new aim six two sitara and pu that we just launched a couple of weeks ago and this is a quad core a 53 soc that integrates security processing uh and graphical interfacing uh so with integrated gpu and display capabilities to drive a single soc to solve all the all the problems around eb charging so this is a step up in performance and features yeah absolutely so what this does is give you a scalability to innovate on software uh in these products right so today to do classical eb charging you really only need about 25 percent of the device's performance but it gives you that scalability to add intelligence at the edge so now instead of having a system that just controls and just communicates it's one that can actually start to make decisions right imagine a smarter grid where you have multiple cars and knowing which car needs to charge first right without any human interaction to drive that intelligence directly at the edge so it's enabling the smart grid exactly because so far it's not been possible so today the smart grid right the way it's been done is it's uh retroactive you collect data you model it and you make smart decision based on that data right with the edgy eye and that intelligence at the edge what you can actually do is make decisions in real time right as the data comes in you make the decision directly there nice uh so do you have some other demos with this chipset yeah we do they're actually on the other side of the booth we can walk over and take a look at so on the other side we actually show in a few uh ai applications where we're integrating camera based uh intelligence uh so what you saw there is intelligence based on data collected from multiple edgy chargers here we have intelligence on the cameras sorry guys i'm going to squeeze in here just briefly so for example what we're doing here is on this exact same chipset you can see it here we're doing intelligence by detecting people so imagine a doorbell applications so this is where our partner plumer i has developed an algorithm running on this soc that can detect people right as you can see on the screen there so imagine applications where people counting in a building where you want to control hvac things like that you want to know when people have walked off to your door so all those kind of applications read a very low power soc that can add that intelligence the edge uh and especially with the security that comes on these devices right it creates a very uh secure private processing directly at the edge you don't have to send any of this information out to the cloud you can just process directly uh at the edge nice uh so is this doing computer vision in a way that's not been done and embedded so far yeah absolutely so this is actually doing instead of doing traditional computer vision this is actually machine learning based right so it's actually applying neural models to do AI in real time uh what is the ti doing in the AI tiny ml space the i tiny ml that might not be quite my area of expertise i think that would be a little closer to the mcu portfolio typically we're on the mpu side right we're we're focused in the tf light space uh so more on the linux and upper level compute there um but sit down do you have any demos with a bluetooth low energy 5.2 a a oa chips something like that yeah i do think we do let me come over here so we do have a new ble chipset that we can look at here in the center maybe if we come around here um so we are demonstrating here a new simplifying bluetooth cc 2340 uh device here that's just been released and it's a very low cost product adding extended battery life so you can see it with currents less than 830 nano amps right really driving a very low power bluetooth wireless mcu's and it starts at 79 cents exactly so low cost solutions and what's on the wall there um here these are a bunch of solutions already using this chip exactly so this is a demonstrator of having many more uh notes together working um i like mesh exactly all right maybe uh one of my colleagues probably knows this demo a little bit better okay uh so yeah maybe a colleague later or what else are you showing at the booth yeah so i think also just one last point i wanted to show is our ecosystem um we can take a look over here this one's the popular part of the area so maybe uh let's go around this way let's go around that way all right let's take a look at it um so as we have these scalable processors that really innovate on how much software you can add to them um we actually are partnering with uh the breadth of our ecosystem into creating off the shelf uh ready to go modules scaling all the way from entry level processors like aim six all the way to our high-end tda4s with edgi analytics integration uh but what we are aiming to do here is make time to market instantaneous through our partnership on systems on modules that provide production ready hardware for our customers which we then pair with our software partners where you can get production-grade software as well built on top of the ti sdk uh so so why is this sign of the booth so popular as because cutting edge time to market solution yeah exactly the reason it's so popular is you can go to market tomorrow with these solutions right and now you can innovate on your software on top of them right that level of entry into the market is unprecedented and that's why it's so popular the most popular side of our booth can can you spend a little bit what's different compared to the way of doing doing it before yeah absolutely um it reduces time to market because you don't have to design anything around the high speed of the socs you don't have to worry about ddr or camera signals right all that is taken care of for you with a hardware module as it is available directly to using your system so you can spin a quick board that you're ready to go to market in weeks rather than months and you have a lot of partners in the ecosystem absolutely and every partner has their own special flavor that they add it can be anything from the size of the modules you can see some of them exceptionally small to the real-time capabilities and industrial quality and reliability so everybody brings a little bit of their own flavor but the breadth of the ecosystem is what helps what does this phytec little board do for example it's just like a tiny board that can do a bunch of stuff yeah exactly so actually funny enough all the demos we saw running live right those were all on this phytec sum and that little board is all it takes to do all of the ev charge you all of the agi that we showed around the booth all the different demos also the one you did for the ev yes exactly it runs exactly on that tiny little module right there so it's got that chip already on it exactly the am at six two six two and already available ready to go so that means you've been working with them in the months or years before launching absolutely yeah and we partner with our ecosystem providers well ahead of our launches to make sure that at the time of our product release is not just a piece of silicon it's a full ecosystem of hardware software readily available for you to get started right out the gate geopper offer hyper vision solutions for multi os yeah like hypervisor and everything yeah we we partner with some commercial providers like q and x for hypervisors so that's definitely available as an option on our products what are we looking at here on the table yeah so leveraging some of our justinto products we actually have autonomous robot platforms for development so this is a scottelbot running on our tda4vm product you can see the board right here and this is really intended to be an autonomous platform for robotics basically can navigate it can map well it does everything you need to do to continue completely autonomously navigate any space nice what do we forget to talk about i don't think we forgot anything quite honestly i think we did a good job covering everything we have here but very exciting time with some of our latest product launches with aim six two and the balee chips and some amazing things happening in the future i guess absolutely there will be no shortage of other exciting parts here coming here soon thanks a lot no problem cool happy to help let me give you my card if you want to check out so it was live streaming it's two hours and 30 minutes into the day one but it's also going separate video okay so i'll be like a video with this thank you so well this was fast and if there's any partners that i should film at maybe you can send me a little message yeah i think we should do that i'll be happy to the videos with all the cool stuff happening at the show yeah i wish it was more than three days because i'm trying to film everything yeah okay cool thanks a lot thank you so much excellent okay just so that is not well so we see around here so this is a minet they got a big booth is there a colcom booth yes there is a colcom booth and this whole live stream is running on a colcom 660 that's in the yellow box pro which is a mind-blowingly amazing device sorry i need to stabilize my selfie camera i'll do that next time maybe if i use the back camera instead of the front camera on this phone let's try to do that and i think it's probably more likely to be stabilized actually why am i using the selfie camera i don't need to use a selfie camera i don't need to look at myself all day let's try to use this cable let's see if that angle is going to work oops okay i shouldn't have done that okay this cable is a little too short i can't that's too short sorry this is going to flip you around again i went on amazon a bunch of i bought a bunch of short cable to not have too many cables hanging around the setup we've got okay this is on pause let's go back to selfie right click here let's get back on auto white balance sorry that didn't work go microsoft somebody wants to see some windows and arm latest windows embedded solutions so where are you mr microsoft this analog devices murata rome let's try to ask us silicon labs somebody was asking a solid run namaste uk okay let's just see if somebody is ready to be filmed so i have to monitor power consumption on this whole system here hi do you know if i can do a video with somebody at boost who should talk about everything so with the silicon labs boost let's obviously focus need sam so start shooting the questions for the silicon labs go on the google's and find some smart things to ask all right let me are you going to talk i i'm live streaming awesome with a three three camera can do normally and and then i'll also put post it not to here right now okay i'll swim back come back yeah give you this for your colleague also so i'll be back maybe tomorrow or maybe later yeah tomorrow thank you how about infinean there's global foundries behind there we ask global foundries what's up with everything can somebody check uh where genetic is and write me the boost number busy some people are busy just ask nordic and sometimes when i ask people i'll put you on hold so i don't live stream people who don't want to be live stream hey do you know if i can uh interview somebody at the booth maybe hey how are you do you want to be on video oh there's a colleague looking for somebody i don't know if he's looking for you this colleague is he looking for you he's looking for somebody to that i should interview the booth you can do it no we did it before covid you're good to be on video only this you don't want to talk everything up to you is anybody else talking about the rest maybe uh your friend behind will take over after the without the hair this guy okay you can start here and then we can ask him if he wants to do more okay i'll be right back as he i'm doing the full tour on thursday okay let me just put this right here i'll be right back in a second all right and we're back okay sorry are you mute just need a little button is it good now yeah yeah good yeah i can hear you okay okay one second okay so here we're at the nordic booth we have some uh products that we're showing here i've removed over here here we have a bluetooth le audio demo so basically what we're showcasing is uh the broadcast functionality and the connected mode of bluetooth le audio so on the broadcast basically we have two transmitters um that are sending on four separate channels uh to two different receivers this one and this one so what we can do is we can cycle on uh four um mono channels so four different songs basically and this demo here is then the connected demo so here we have one uh one transmitter and two receivers here so that's the main thing what i want to say quickly is basically bluetooth le audio we're using the lc3 uh codec um so that is basically it's very compared to bluetooth classic um you have better perceived audio quality and you also have a better power consumption are there many products with this uh codec on the market or it's brand new it's quite new it's quite new yeah and enables multi streams and everything more than what's been done before yeah so you can do on the broadcast demo you can do almost an unlimited number of receivers if we move over here um here we're showcasing our thingy world demo um so basically we have a few uh we have this Nordic thingy 91 which is basically based on the nrf 91 60 sip so that's with ltm1 and narrow band iot um and in this demo basically what we can see is we'll go here you can see all of these devices that are actually connected and if we go to this one for example we can see this one's based up in trondheim norway and here you can see the accuracy of the location you can also see the temperature you can see the humidity uh also the coordinates if i go back here i can actually see also so basically here we're connecting to our own cloud nrf cloud um and it part of nrf cloud we have nrf cloud uh location services um so in this case we are using single cell so that means we're connected to one cellular base station to get a uh position um if we move over to the other side i don't want to start something yes just sorry sorry he's filming sorry about that okay so in this demo here we are basically showcasing the low power mode um so as you can see if i press button one so now you can see we're basically uh reconnecting to the base station so you have a bit more uh power consumption here and then after a while it will go back into psm uh sleep mode so on the psm mode we're roughly as you can see yeah it's roughly like four microamps in sleep mode what we're trying to showcase here is our nrf 9160 development kit so that's this one here also has the nrf 9160 system package and we're showcasing the power profiler kit too so this is the kit it's connected to the nrf 9160 and then this one is connected to pc and it's showing uh this uh software here that's running so this is a great tool for basically uh power optimization so yeah so it's an exciting chipset for the industry very very exciting yeah with the new levels of performance you're going in nanometer you're going smaller i'm not not nanometer but we're looking at micro i mean we're in the micro amp range but i'm talking about the yeah the size of the die uh is a new process and uh the price is interesting yeah price is interesting but that you can find out on our website uh let's move on to the i think you might have to wait a bit but we can move on to the location demo afterwards let's let's walk around here there's some bunch of demos there and uh the screen maybe i'll go around here uh so how does it feel to be to be back in a embedded world that's great it's uh it's fun being here we see a lot of customers so yeah we have a lot of demos here so yeah and how did you network with people during the strange two years did you have like a bunch of online webinars we had a lot of online webinars so Nordic tech webinars so if you go to nordicsemi.com slash webinars you can sign up for any upcoming webinars and Nordic nice and so there's just one last demo right are you going to talk about that or you have a friend doing i'll have a friend that does that one let's check with your friend if he's available yeah just let him finish here yeah all right thanks thanks is there anything i didn't ask hear the Nordic is it uh it's busy okay cool so it's basically it's demo right here what a new improvements real-time location services on the ability chips this angle of arrival now supported in firmware yep then you could try to ask we'll see you can finish up the video let's stop the i might just only release the sub clips from the live stream in 1080p which will be strange for me to only do 1080p i used to always do 10 4k 60 but i record everything in 4k 60 so i might i do okay he's too busy let's see if i'll be right back to him rtls so it's important to get it done there's only this guy who can talk about it looks like i just broke a microphone cable that's why he couldn't hear me uh i try to have backups on everything so hopefully i have another microphone cable that'll take over especially for tomorrow now it's 520 i don't think i can do with more than just one microphone so it'll be tricky but it'll work out hey is there one of you guys who wants to be on video about this maybe maybe this one is more impressive like with this okay let me give you the mic yeah i think i'll turn off the also sound it's good so hi so what are you showing here yeah so here we're showing you have some of the different sort of location services that we provide so this is using direction finding it's based on the bluetooth 5.1 standard the way it works is that you need to have a kind of located device with multiple antennas in this case we have 12 patch antennas in a sort of array and it will receive a signal from a beacon device in this case it's just a standard n-ray 52 840 development kit and based on these antennas it can detect the face of the incoming signal which allows you to calculate the call it the angle of arrival or the angle of departure and if you have multiple of these devices in a larger room typically would be like a commercial installation or industrial like a larger building you can then calculate the location of this device based on triangulating the angles received by different locators is that rtls no so it's not using time of flight or anything like that it's just using the angle of the rf signal and since you have multiple locators you can then do the triangulation in the on the back end side so how's how's the different from previous bluetooth positioning solutions well so traditionally bluetooth would use rssi so this does not use rssi which means it's more reliable in terms of say you have something in between that blocks the signal you'll still get the right information so it's basically more reliable and gives you better accuracy so we should be able to go down to around 10 centimeter accuracy depending on how many of these locators you have in the area and another advantage compared to some other systems is that you have you have lower power consumption and lower cost compared to something like ultra wide band where you get very good accuracy but you have to pay for it with power and cost of the system what is showing here on the screen yeah so this is basically taking the signal that is received from this beacon and it's visualizing the angle in this interface so as i'm moving this board around there's a bit of delay so it takes some time to update but you should basically see that it will track the position of this device relative to this board and the solution we have today it only gives you the the angle of the signal so the higher level doing the triangulation is not something we currently provide so that has to be added on top and then as i move around you should be able to see that the angle is updating here well you need at least a three to to be able to calculate an exact point in space if you in a building maybe you can get away with two because you know that the device would be below you it would never be above you then you should be able to get away with the two locators but it really depends on what kind of accuracy you need so obviously the more locators that you have the more precise location you're able to achieve no i mean i guess this device you can see over there there's a smaller device so you can make it a bit smaller i don't know if you want to go and take a look but yeah as one you can see on top you know so this is actually running the same solution it's just a different array so see they've been able to make it a bit smaller okay okay but yeah you can make it smaller but in general the bigger it is the better accuracy you get so it's sort of a trade-off between the size and and the resolution so you need development kits available uh no well this one you can actually this one you can buy from a company called Insight SIP so we have a partner of us Insight SIP that make modules based on the Nordic solution and they will be able to sell you this type of board with the Insight SIP module so yeah if you communicate with them it's definitely possible to get hold of one of these Is it like companies track and trace kind of things events who's going to be customer for this solution yeah i mean obviously the size of this dictates that this is not really a consumer product it's more for commercial installations you know in big office buildings or in hospitals or in venues like this airports any kind of location where you want to track a lot of devices with a moderate level of accuracy and the advantage of our solution is that on the beacon side or on the transmitter side you can have a very simple low power solution that can be small and where the battery life can be very good so this is sort of the advantage of this solution compared to some other solutions out there well it depends on the frequency how often you see send updates but you should be able to get a couple of year battery life with a 2032 coin cell based on this solution it's just that as long as you make sure not to send the updates too often you should be able to yeah reach two years or beyond that would say is the AOA and AOD supported in the SDK i'm not sure if we support both to be honest i don't remember that at the top of my head so you're pretty much helping to find a needle in the haystack using bluetooth basically yes or if you've lost something in in the bigger installation you can't find the expensive equipment or things have been misplaced you can help keep track of that yeah lower power lower costs on the device side easy integration with existing bluetooth solutions yeah at least in finland i guess we we have some partners working with us on these kind of positioning solutions so i guess is it kubo or korva or just mix them up but yeah we are working with some of these companies that are very specialized on these sort of they don't use this exact technology but they use Nordic devices but i think i'm not sure how far along they are but they make their own stack and their own positioning location based on the nrf 52 devices what is what is the resolution of accuracy i don't know the korva solution what kind of accuracy they achieve you would have to talk to them but it's it's relatively accurate i think it's down to around 10 centimeter or something like that it's similar it depends on the distance i mean right now we only have one device so we need to have multiple devices to be able to triangle it so if you're quite close to the locator you can get down to around 10 centimeters but if you're very far away i mean the accuracy will go down so it really depends on how many of these locators you have and how far away you are from the locator what can you say about the antenna partnerships do you work with antenna providers or something like that yeah so well we work with many different antenna providers i guess i mean just on the on the cellular side we have like tau glass we work with we have some other companies as well that work with us on these different antennas on the on this kind of stuff i don't know exactly this one i guess we designed ourselves so we haven't really got that made by anyone else but yeah we do try to find partnership with interesting companies that can sort of help us out on the antenna side yeah no worries yeah sure i think we might have met before yeah we did a video oh yeah that's a long time ago isn't it 2018 yeah i think we talked about the bluetooth stuff maybe which one probably more than bluetooth stuff i expect or well this is bluetooth too but i mean three five one yeah high speed bluetooth maybe a long range these kind of things yeah this was live streaming oh live even multiple cameras okay three hours into the video you can find it but i'll split it out okay i'll put it as a separate video oh that's cool i was recording in core q16 here at the same time oh really and you're streaming all that i'm using a 5g dodgy telecom here but it's bonded with a 4g in here okay speedy fight so i can have a better and all of this is reliable in practice that's impressive yeah i was i was thinking it would not be working the only thing that happened is i just out there i broke my mic second microphone cable oh really just it's only stupid yeah why do you have the phone i was curious about that you have a lot of screens going on yeah so i have a i can do it myself right here okay so i wanted to have a mixture phone here to have like the same thing yeah i need to fit it tomorrow i'll try yeah i have four inputs oh really three hdmi's and one usb oh really usb with hdmi capture i need to record so all of them at the same time yeah live streams to youtube i saw your youtube yeah right now you want to be on top yeah yeah no it's quite the rig this is a cool setup you know with the covid i have to compensate yeah yeah yeah i didn't do anything last few years just been buying more gear so i can't as much as i could oh wow yeah that's impressive it's called the yellow box pro okay it's crazy but uh it's a lot bigger i don't know how they can do so many hdmi inputs yeah i'm bonding because it's running android so i can use the speedy fly app oh really it's a hack it's not official but i have it running in the background so it's bonding those two connections okay o2 and dutch have come oh really it's spent a lot of money on sim cards for three days yeah 4k 60 that must be heavy because we got like a five gigabyte card for the it's only streaming 1080p oh okay yeah you don't need more no but i'm recording in 4k 60 okay i could publish 4k 60 after yeah but it'll be uh i don't know if i'll edit no i'll just put the only that camera before k 60 and the rest is live stream yeah wow that's cool and you have all these crazy questions coming in so that's why i was asking you all this stuff so that's people watching yeah giving me better questions that i could figure out wow okay that is that is cool somebody wants to see yeah i was uh impressed and somebody was asking about the antenna the resolution yeah yeah i was impressed by the questions it's like wow you really prepared for this i don't do anything i just read what he says brilliant you have 100 000 subscribers oh that's good yeah you saw it yeah i wish i knew some of these things like your dancer it was quite deep yeah oh it's a zero nice so i need to well i'm impressed you can get all this hardware running i mean we're setting up demos there and it's just getting this is the most expensive power bank i ever bought it's 85 euros oh really oh yeah you need a lot of power for all this stuff do you mind if i have a picture of your setup i'd love to stop recording stuff i'm a regular photographer it's just a complaining about the switch phones oh how many phones are you bringing because i always use those phones that have the you know huawei and yeah and some soon they can do hdmi display okay out or in or yeah okay there's this app called filming pro yeah it can it can output the clean hdmi oh okay so then it's you're combining that with the wheeled camera or the 30 camera okay that's me okay we just plug it and it works that is really cool i'm getting the questions live that is nice i've never seen one something i wanted to do for years and years yeah i wanted to do it with a small glass oh yeah live stream and i have my questions in my face that would be that would be cool i can do that too but yeah i have one of these small things that can take the phone output but i want to find an app that only shows the chat yeah and you have to be able to scroll maybe or stop it or yeah something yeah the problem is this one already shows the chat so maybe i don't need yeah yeah so i could just do somebody's asking micro a hole four stand okay are we in hole four yeah we are in four but i don't know why it should be close by yeah cool yeah yeah thanks thanks yeah yeah oh yeah and you have my card right i do if you want you can send me a little text and i can use it for your video when i split it out okay well thanks a lot thank you what would be cool is if they invite me to the headquarters and then i can spend