News

For systems that require this high level of organization, LIN stacks are available for popular LIN MCUs, such as Silicon Labs’ C8051F5xx family. These stacks can be directly loaded onto the MCU.
Topping all of this protocol niceness off is a wide variety of LIN transceiver chips ranging from $0.25 to $0.50 for plain transceivers, on up to around a buck or two for “system basis” chips ...
The new reference design uses the digital PSoC blocks to implement an example LIN bus application, and supports all of the recommended baud rates (2400, 9600 and 19,200). To develop the LIN bus ...
The local interconnection network (LIN) standard is the first to address Class A open-multiplexing protocols within vehicles. It defines a low cost, serial communication system for distributed ...
Cypress has released a kit that enables designers to evaluate the Controller Area Network (CAN) and Local Interconnect Network (LIN) slave communication capability of Cypress’s PSoC programmable ...
LIN slave mop-up chip meets ISO26262 AMS had introduced a LIN companion chip for MCUs that complies with the automotive ISO26262 functional safety standard, claiming it to be the first. “ISO26262 ...
Atmel has available a standalone LIN bus transceiver IC which complies with the latest LIN2.0 standard while providing ESD protection to 5kV. The device is designed to meet the 42V power requirements ...