
DIY Watertight Junction Box For Serious Outdoor Sealing
Feb 07, 2024Best Fishing Bags and Tackle Backpacks
Apr 10, 202414 Amazing Outdoor Bluetooth Speakers for 2023
Mar 28, 202441 Items To Turn Your Boring Yard Into An Outdoor Sanctuary
Apr 01, 2024MARNI JAMESON: Get your house protected in case lightning strikes
Apr 29, 2024SemiDrive D9
MYiR MYC-JD9360 is a CPU Module powered by SemiDrive D9-Pro (D9360) processor with six Arm Cortex-A55 application cores, a dual-core lock-step Cortex-R5 real-time core along with a PowerVR GPU, 4Kp30 H.265/H.264 VPU and a 0.8 TOPS NPU, and designed for motion control and industrial applications.
The MYC-JD9360 CPU module also comes with 2GB LPDDR4, 16GB eMMC flash, 16MB QSPI Flash, 256Kbit EEPROM, and exposes I/Os such as PCIe 3.0, USB 3.0, CAN FD, and TSN-enabled Gigabit Ethernet through a 314-pin MXM connector. The company also provides the MYD-JD9360 development board to quickly get started with the module and evaluate the solution.
Specifications:
MYiR provides Yocto Linux and Ubuntu support for the module, and Android is coming soon. The D9-Pro is supposed to be a relatively new processor that was sampled in October 2022, but SemiDrive must have kept the legacy SDK used in their previous generation D-series processors, as the MYiR Tech website lists Linux 4.14, Ubuntu 18.04, and Android 10 in the software section.
The MYD-JD9360 development board can be used to evaluate the MYC-JD9360 CPU module and by extension the SemiDrive D9-Pro Cortex-A55/R5 SoC.
Specifications and key features:
Typical applications include industrial robots, factory equipment, smart automotive dashboards, in-vehicle entertainment, smart medical equipment, etc… Sample pricing for the MYC-JD9360 CPU module starts at $65 with a heatsink, while the development kit goes for $159 with one module, the carrier board, and accessories to get started. A 7-inch LCD module with a capacitive touchscreen and/or a MIPI CSI camera module can also be purchased as options. More details, including documentation and purchase links, can be found on the product page.
Jean-Luc started CNX Software in 2010 as a part-time endeavor, before quitting his job as a software engineering manager, and starting to write daily news, and reviews full time later in 2011.
Support CNX Software! Donate via cryptocurrencies or become a Patron on Patreon
Related posts:

