By: Embedded Systems Architect
There is a moment in every embedded engineer’s career when you stop looking at a software version string as a label and start seeing it as a blueprint. Today, we are dissecting a string that has appeared in a few leaked engineering logs and academic citations: . p10-1r--v706 software
At first glance, it looks like a typo or a serial number. But to those of us working at the intersection of ROS2, real-time Linux, and space-rated compute, the p10-1r--v706 stack represents a paradigm shift. It is not an application; it is a for autonomous systems operating in high-latency, low-SNR (Signal-to-Noise Ratio) environments. By: Embedded Systems Architect There is a moment
The vehicle continues flying. You might lose 100ms of control precision, but you don't lose the vehicle. You don't need a space-rated CPU to learn from p10-1r--v706 . This architecture is bleeding down to autonomous forklifts, surgical robots, and nuclear reactor monitoring. But to those of us working at the