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An embedded system is a computer system designed to perform one or a few dedicated functions often with real-time computing constraints. It is embedded as part of a complete device often including hardware and mechanical parts. By contrast, a general-purpose computer, such as a personal computer (PC), is designed to be flexible and to meet a wide range of end-user needs. Embedded systems control many devices in common use today. Embedded systems are controlled by one or more main processing cores that are typically either microcontrollers or digital signal processors (DSP). The key characteristic, however, is being dedicated to handle a particular task, which may require very powerful processors. For example, air traffic control systems may usefully be viewed as embedded, even though they involve mainframe computers and dedicated regional and national networks between airports and radar sites. (Each radar probably includes one or more embedded systems of its own.) Since the embedded system is dedicated to specific tasks, design engineers can optimize it to reduce the size and cost of the product and increase the reliability and performance. Some embedded systems are mass-produced, benefiting from economies of scale. Physically, embedded systems range from portable devices such as digital watches and MP3 players, to large stationary installations like traffic lights, factory controllers, or the systems controlling nuclear power plants. Complexity varies from low, with a single microcontroller chip, to very high with multiple units, peripherals and networks mounted inside a large chassis or enclosure. In general, "embedded system" is not a strictly definable term, as most systems have some element of extensibility or programmability. For example, handheld computers share some elements with embedded systems such as the operating systems and microprocessors which power them, but they allow different applications to be loaded and peripherals to be connected. Moreover, even systems which don't expose programmability as a primary feature generally need to support software updates. On a continuum from "general purpose" to "embedded", large application systems will have subcomponents at most points even if the system as a whole is "designed to perform one or a few dedicated functions", and is thus appropriate to call "embedded". From Wikipedia under the
GNU Free Documentation License What are the top US universities to do Masters in Embedded systems? Q. I want to pursue Masters in Embedded Technology/Systems/Design . . . Please give a list of Top universities in US so that I can use that information for my Grad-school search . . . Asked by US - Mon Apr 5 01:32:16 2010 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments A. Hey...there.. i can certainly give you some good university recommendation for you stream of course.. 1. The PENCis university , PA, US You can your course and admission details at 2. Another one of finest unversities are Oakland Unviersity.. Find more about you respective course details at.. Or you can look for more of these unversity links too... 3. UC Irvine 4. Purdue Univ https://engineering.purdu e.edu/ECE/Graduates/ 5. UCSB 6. U. Texas - Austin 7. G Tech 8.Penn State Univ 9. Maryland College Park 10. Columbia i hope you will find the course of your choice in one of these universites... Let me know..if can do anything else for you. I hope this helps clearning path to your carrier. Happy to help… [cont.] Answered by Barbara - Mon Apr 5 02:23:23 2010 How to decide the amount of stack memory in any microprocessor in Embedded Systems? Q. How to decide the amount of stack memory in any microprocessor in Embedded Systems? Asked by MSK - Mon Sep 21 10:12:06 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments A. Start with a large stack, initialise the entire stack allocation to a known value, then exercise your program as much as possible. Then break into a debugger and find the "high water mark" on your stack, i.e. the point at which the stack area is still initialised to its original value. Add a safety margin to this empirical high water mark (e.g. 50%) and you're good to go. Alternatively you can add up all the storage for all your local variables and calling frames for the worst case calling tree, and again add a generous safety margin. Answered by Paul - Mon Sep 21 12:08:02 2009 What does web browsers do to optimize memory usage on embedded systems (iPhone, DS, etc)?
Q. With limited RAM, how do these browsers handle large webpages? This is more of a programming/algorithm question. Asked by Walker - Tue Aug 18 11:21:22 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments A. Most of today's current technology devices come with plenty of memory, usually hundreds of megabytes (if not gigabytes). And it is rare that a single web page will use up that amount of memory. Of course, there are those exceptions, and that is when only a portion of the web page is made available to the device for viewing, the additional portion will be downloaded when the user needs to see the rest of it. Which means that most likely it will not be holding the whole page within memory, but releasing whatever is not currently being used. . Answered by Nahee_Enterprises - Tue Aug 25 17:59:53 2009 From Yahoo Answer Search: "embedded systems" Recent patent infringement cases filed in the Eastern District of Texas
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