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Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP) is a range of software-defined radios designed and sold by Ettus Research and its parent company, National Instruments. Developed by a team led by Matt Ettus , the USRP product family is commonly used by research labs, universities, and hobbyists.
300 MHz – 3.8 GHz 28 MHz 12 12 Yes 80 kSPS – 40 MSPS 1 ? USB 3.0 SuperSpeed Yes Yes Yes Altera Cyclone 4 E bladeRF 2.0 micro [30] Pre-built 47 MHz – 6 GHz 56 MHz 12 12 Yes 61.44 MSPS 2/2 USB 3.0 SuperSpeed Yes Yes Yes Altera Cyclone V ColibriDDC [31] Pre-built 10 kHz – 62.5 MHz, up to 800 MHz (oversampling) 38 – 312 kHz 14 N/A No
Scala: Application, general, parallel, distributed, web Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Data-oriented programming, metaprogramming De facto standard via Scala Language Specification (SLS) Scheme: Education, general Yes No Yes No No No meta, extensible-syntax De facto 1975-2013, R 0 RS, R 1 RS, R 2 RS, R 3 RS, R 4 RS, R 5 RS, R 6 RS, R 7 RS Small Edition ...
sbt is the de facto build tool in the Scala community, [6] used, for example, by the Scala 2 and Scala 3 compilers themselves, [7] [8] Play Framework, and Lichess, a popular chess server. The sbt project is "bootstrapped" — it uses sbt to build itself and considers dogfooding a positive feature.
Scala runs on the Java platform (Java virtual machine) and is compatible with existing Java programs. [15] As Android applications are typically written in Java and translated from Java bytecode into Dalvik bytecode (which may be further translated to native machine code during installation) when packaged, Scala's Java compatibility makes it well-suited to Android development, the more so when ...
Scala is a freeware software application with versions supporting Windows, macOS, and Linux. It allows users to create and archive musical scales , analyze and transform them with built-in theoretical tools, play them with an on-screen keyboard or from an external MIDI keyboard, and export them to hardware and software synthesizers.
The xHCI reduces the need for periodic device polling by allowing a USB 3.0 or later device to notify the host controller when it has data available to read, and moves the management of polling USB 2.0 and 1.1 devices that use interrupt transactions from the CPU-driven USB driver to the USB host controller.
Chisel (an acronym for Constructing Hardware in a Scala Embedded Language [1]) is an open-source hardware description language (HDL) used to describe digital electronics and circuits at the register-transfer level. [2] [3] Chisel is based on Scala as a domain-specific language (DSL).