The First Image of a Black Hole
By Andreea Volosincu This week, the world had a first view of the ground-breaking discoveries brought forth by Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) – an international scientific collaboration aiming to create...
View ArticleWind River Helps Collins Aerospace Future-proof Avionics Systems
Future airspace will be filled with drones, commercial aircraft, helicopters, and more. Several prototypes are currently targeting urban air mobility solutions such as air taxis, or revolutionary...
View ArticleWind River Showcases FACE™ Demonstration for Multi-core Safety-Critical...
By Tom Mullen Wind River’s commitment to meeting the affordability, innovation, and safety-critical needs of the avionics community was on display this week at the Open Group Future Airborne Capability...
View ArticleBetter Together – A Community for Safety Certification on Multi-Core Processors
By Tim Skutt Last week, I participated in one of a series of collaborative workshops on Multi-Core Processor (MCP) Certification at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base hosted by the US Army. Wait, was that...
View ArticleFrost & Sullivan Recognizes Wind River with Technology Leadership Award for...
By Michel Genard Frost & Sullivan annually presents the Technology Leadership Award to the company that demonstrates uniqueness in developing and leveraging new technologies that deliver...
View ArticleVxWorks: A Long Love Story with Multi-core
By Michel Chabroux While it may seem mundane today to talk about multi-core, it used to be a big deal. Back in the day, all CPUs came with a single core (Zylog Z80, Motorola 68K, PowerPC 8xx, 386,...
View ArticleWhy Virtualization Holds the Key to Application Portability
By Andreea Volosincu This week, at the Paris Air Show, new information was released on the demonstrator programs for core elements of the Future Combat Air System (FCAS). Driven by France and Germany,...
View ArticleSpace as the final frontier? Simulate for safety!
By Michel Genard Mythology tells the tale of Icarus burning his wings while flying too close to the sun. In the 16th century, Leonardo da Vinci sketched a flight machine, and flight became a reality in...
View ArticleGet the Insider’s View on Satellite Technology Today
By Andreea Volusincu The first U.S. Weather Satellite weighed 270 pounds. That made most people associate the word “satellite” with either a moon, a sputnik, or a modern rig with rocket motors, solar...
View ArticleFrom Sputnik to SmallSats: Three Factors that Have Changed the Satellite...
By Wind River Intern Ranjan Sikand Multi-national corporations and startups alike have begun to tackle the emerging sector of commercial spacecraft. Known as “new space,” it is the sector where...
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