Tag: Automotive

  • The Backbone of Digital Health

    Smart healthcare is redefining modern medicine by weaving technology seamlessly into patient care. The result is a system that is more connected, efficient, and personalised than ever before. From wearable devices and AI-driven diagnostics to big data analytics and telemedicine, technology is not only improving health outcomes but also reducing costs and empowering patients to take control of their well-being.

    At the very heart of this transformation lies electronics. Whether it’s the advanced sensors inside wearables or the AI-enabled processors driving diagnostic tools, electronics are the invisible engine making healthcare smarter. They enable continuous monitoring, real-time data sharing, predictive insights, and tailored treatments — capabilities that were unthinkable just a decade ago.

    From Beds to Bots: The Future of Hospital Intelligence

    Electronics are also reshaping hospital infrastructure. Smart beds monitor patient movement, RFID tags streamline the tracking of equipment and people, and automation systems reduce human error while boosting efficiency. Behind the scenes, electronics form the nervous system of today’s intelligent hospitals.

    Wireless and Smart Medical Devices

    Life-saving innovations like pacemakers, insulin pumps, and neurostimulators rely entirely on electronic systems. Many now integrate wireless monitoring, enabling physicians to track device performance remotely. Emerging technologies such as ingestible “smart pills” take this a step further, transmitting valuable health information directly from inside the body — without invasive procedures.

    Smart Medical Imaging

    Modern imaging systems — MRI, CT, ultrasound, and X-ray — depend on cutting-edge electronics. Advances in sensors and processing improve image clarity, reduce radiation exposure, and accelerate analysis. Meanwhile, AI-powered digital pathology is transforming diagnostics by enabling earlier, more accurate disease detection.

    Seamless Integration of Patient Data

    Handheld ECGs, glucose monitors, and smart blood pressure cuffs bring healthcare directly to the patient. With built-in Bluetooth® and Wi-Fi connectivity, these devices integrate seamlessly with electronic health records and mobile apps, allowing real-time data sharing with healthcare providers.


    Wearable Devices and Sensors

    From smartwatches and fitness trackers to medical-grade wearables, electronics power the measurement of vital signs such as heart rate, oxygen levels, and glucose. Miniaturised sensors, processors, wireless chips, and batteries work together to capture and transmit health data instantly. Even hearing aids have evolved into sophisticated microcomputers, offering enhanced comfort and performance.

    Electronics Powering Smart Medical Devices

    Inside every medical device, electronics handle the critical tasks of processing data and transmitting it securely. Communication standards like Bluetooth Low Energy, Zigbee, NFC, and Wi-Fi ensure reliable connectivity. Embedded AI chips and edge computing bring real-time intelligence directly to the device, while energy-efficient batteries and energy-harvesting technologies extend the lifespan of wearables and implants.

    The next wave of innovation will take healthcare even further:

    • Flexible electronics and e-textiles for wearables that feel like clothing.
    • Brain-computer interfaces and advanced prosthetics to restore lost functions.
    • Neuromorphic and quantum electronics to unlock breakthroughs in prediction and treatment.

    Together, these advancements will accelerate the vision of P4 Medicine â€” Predictive, Preventive, Personalised, and Participatory healthcare.

    As technology continues to evolve, one truth remains constant: electronics are the backbone of digital health. They power the devices, insights, and connections that make medicine safer, smarter, and more human.

  • Bluetooth 6.0 Channel Sounding: The Next Big Leap in Indoor Positioning

    Imagine walking up to your car and having it unlock only when you are exactly close enough. Or a hospital that can instantly locate critical medical equipment down to the centimeter. Or a warehouse where assets are mapped and tracked in real time. These aren’t futuristic visions anymore. They’re powered by Bluetooth 6.0 Channel Sounding (CS), the latest evolution of the world’s most widely adopted short-range wireless technology.

    While UWB (Ultra-Wideband) has dominated headlines for its centimeter-level accuracy and robust security, Bluetooth has something new up its sleeve. By introducing channel sounding, Bluetooth is closing the gap by unlocking true fine-ranging capability without the need for additional radios.

    At its core, Bluetooth CS is about measuring distance with far more precision than older BLE techniques like RSSI or even Direction Finding. Instead of just estimating proximity, CS employs two methods together:

    • Phase-Based Ranging (PBR): Calculates distance by analyzing the phase difference between transmitted and received signals.
    • Round-Trip Time (RTT): Measures the signal’s time of flight, i.e., how long it takes to travel between devices.

    When combined, PBR and RTT deliver centimeter-level distance accuracy—turning Bluetooth from “close enough” into “pinpoint precise.” Devices can measure ranges up to 150 meters, using between one and four antennas per side depending on the accuracy and power trade-offs required.

    Location accuracy is only half the story, security is the other. Bluetooth CS incorporates a series of safeguards against relay and man-in-the-middle attacks:

    • DRBG (Distributed Random Bit Generator) randomizes channel usage.
    • Data encryption ensures exchanged ranging information can’t be manipulated.
    • NADM (Normalized Attack Detector Metric) helps detect suspicious inconsistencies.
    • And finally, cross-checking PBR and RTT results makes spoofing far harder.

    This matters most for proximity-based systems like smart locks, keyless car entry, or access control, where attackers might try to trick a lock into thinking you’re nearby. With CS, those attacks become exponentially more difficult.

    Unlike UWB, which often requires dedicated hardware, Bluetooth CS is built into the devices people already carry—smartphones, laptops, tablets. That means developers can launch location-based services without adding new radios, reducing cost and speeding up adoption.

    Applications split into two main categories:

    1. Localization & “Find My” services: Track personal items, warehouse assets, or medical equipment in real time.
    2. Proximity Awareness: Enable smarter, safer access control for vehicles, homes, and industrial systems.

    But it doesn’t stop there. From geofencing and human-machine interfaces (HMI) to smart home automation, CS unlocks richer context awareness in everyday interactions.

    Released in September 2024, Bluetooth 6.0 brings CS as an optional—but highly anticipated—feature. Major semiconductor players are already on board:

    • Nordic Semiconductor’s nRF54L15 SoCs are its first with CS support, paired with qualified host/controller software in the Nordic SDK.
    • NXP’s MCX W72 and KW47 families will target industrial IoT and automotive, with tool support from the MCUXpresso Developer Experience.

    And because CS is now a standardized Bluetooth feature, devices will be interoperable through Bluetooth’s qualification program. Developers can trust their solutions will work across platforms.

    There are still some choices and trade-offs:

    • Optional feature: Not every Bluetooth 6.0 device will support CS (at least initially).
    • Antenna count vs. power: More antennas mean higher accuracy but greater energy consumption.
    • Distance calculation: While the framework is standardized, developers must implement or adapt algorithms themselves—though only one device in a pair needs to handle the computation.

    For guidance, engineers can turn to manufacturers offering algorithm access or reach out to our technical engineers for integration support.

    For years, UWB has been the benchmark for high-accuracy indoor positioning. Now, Bluetooth 6.0 Channel Sounding brings comparable precision without requiring new radios in end-user devices. With the technology already present in billions of smartphones and IoT devices, the path to mass adoption is much shorter.

    Bluetooth CS doesn’t just refine Bluetooth, it redefines what’s possible with wireless connectivity. From secure keyless entry to asset tracking across industries, it sets the stage for the next wave of indoor positioning systems. And in a world where location awareness is becoming a cornerstone of user experience, that makes CS a breakthrough worth watching.