Qualcomm, which purchased microcontroller board manufacturer Arduino last year, just announced a new single-board computer that marries AI with robotics. Called the Arduino Ventuno Q, it uses Qualcomm's Dragonwing IQ8 processor along with a dedicated STM32H5 low-latency microcontroller (MCU). "Ventuno Q is engineered specifically for systems that move, manipulate and respond to the physical world with precision and reliability," the company wrote on the product page.
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2026-03-06 00:00:00:03014367910http://paper.people.com.cn/rmrb/pc/content/202603/06/content_30143679.htmlhttp://paper.people.com.cn/rmrb/pad/content/202603/06/content_30143679.html11921 解放军和武警部队代表团分组审议政府工作报告
I think sometimes when I mention C# to non-indie game devs their minds jump to what it looked like circa 2003 - a closed source, interpreted, verbose, garbage collected language, and... the language has greatly improved since then. The C# of 2025 is vastly different from the C# of even 2015, and many of those changes are geared towards the performance and syntax of the language. You can allocate dynamically sized arrays on the stack! C++ can't do that (although C99 can ;) ...).
technology has consequences that are felt by real people in their daily lives.