 Hi, please introduce yourself. Hi, I'm Markus from Karow Electronics in Germany Aachen. We manufacture computer modules late in Germany. I'm from the software department. Lots of coolest new boards you talk about here. We have the IDOL MX93 over here. These are the latest one, the smallest form factor. So that's high performance if you can go this side. So I get your sound right there. So high performance, ARM Cortex A55, dual core. The landmark is just this small. What is this? This is the module. This is the form factor of the module. Everything on this board comes with processor, T-RAM, flash power management unit. What is the whole thing we see here? This is the evaluation board you can buy as a customer to develop your first kind of software for product. It's made to later on design your own base board where you just solder on this module. How much is the module? The module pricing is done with our sales. It depends how many people order. It can be small quantity, big quantity. It depends on quantity but everyone is welcome to contact our sales for further information. And is this like a RAM? It looks like you slap it in. Is that your form factor? This is another form factor from us. We developed our own standard. This is the plug-in standard and mostly identical pin-out with the solder-down standard. Same chip? Same chip. Both I.MX93. So where is the I.MX? Can you point to it? Is that one? And what is the other stuff? The other stuff we have the flash over here. Yeah? Yeah, I think... Sorry, I'm just a software guy. I think Nania was the flash. And a bunch of other chips. Yeah, we have the Ethernet PHY, also power management, and the DRAM. Nice. DDR4L. How many years has Karo been doing this kind of work? Karo exists since in the 90s to give you the exact year. Common producing since... We work with ARM, work with NXP. To see our company exist since 1988. Oh wow. Yeah, we work with NXP, SCM32, and also INIZAS. That was ARM3 in 1988. I'm joking. Okay. And these are RENASAS, RZGIL, RZG2L. Yes. Yeah, as you can see, they also follow along the plug-in standard and also the sold-down standard. Is it cheaper to do this form factor, or it's more expensive because it's smaller, maybe? It depends. But it depends on what you need, on which form factor. Mostly price depends on components which are on there. What kind of software do you work with? We are developed Linux. Linux compiled by Yocto with kernel bootloader. You can also have Debian on ARM64, but to talk from software side, that's not a good way to go with embedded Linux. Why is Debian not a good way? I would say graphic stacks library or every hardware related stuff isn't supported very good. But Debian has graphics? Of course. Well supported? Yeah. Yocto compiles all the libraries you need for GPU, runtime and other stuff. So Yocto is much more customizable and much more lightweight because lightweight is what you need for embedded products. Debian is more kind of a big blob. It's very easy for someone to start with Debian, but with Yocto, my opinion is you cannot go past Yocto if you want to make a real product. And here we have ST32 MP1, that's a dual cluster with an A7 and also with a microcontroller. And Yocto is good on this, on all of them the same. Yes, we run our own BSP so we extend the layers from the manufacturer of the processor and make it work for all our hardware so you get all the features you need. Cool. What's the latest developments that have been happening with the Yocto? A lot of advancements in the last couple years, a lot of things are better and better. Yocto is continuously growing, but Yocto itself stayed basic. What's growing is software around Yocto, like Linux is developing very fast in the last years. I think we ran in the last two years from Linux 5 to Linux 6. All our modules are on Linux 5.15 at the moment on the long-term stable version and I think that's one of our benefits we can use for. Yocto itself is a solid tool to configure your own embedded Linux. How good is this new NXP? Is it great? I'm very impressed by the Cortex A55. Since it's just a dual core, it's very fast. Maybe I can show you a Buddha process. We can just reset it so to tell you what's going on, it now starts the Linux kernel, then it boots into Weston Welland desktop and then it launches an electron chromium-based web app, which is our demonstration application. So you see, 6 seconds booted up. And we would be able to even make this a bit faster. Like we have one second boot delay where the developer could interrupt into the boot loader or something. We could speed this up even more if you'd like to. So in 6 seconds demonstration application was up and running. What's the coolest stuff that your customers do? Many cool projects? Yeah, we have a bunch of cool projects. What are the coolest stuff I might remember? Since I'm a big fan of big machinery and the explicators, a customer who does control software for big explicators. And I think this is the coolest one, but there are many others you might imagine. Cool. All right. Great show, no? Busy. Yeah, sure. Different customers showing up. Yeah. Okay. Cool. Thanks a lot. Yeah, you're welcome. Have a good day.