thomasthorpe's comments

thomasthorpe | 1 year ago | on: Alarms in medical equipment

Yes, well, some. To gain certification, often something customers require, medical devices must comply with standards such as ISO60601 (hardware) ISO62304 (software) and ISO13485 (process, quality management).

The alarm waveforms described are within the scope of the hardware standard guidelines, sufficiently common that application notes such as this exist. https://www.ti.com/lit/pdf/slaaec3 [ti.com]

thomasthorpe | 2 years ago | on: Interfaces for prototyping hardware

It can be indirectly. Addons exist to for instance convert the mathematical models described in Simulink to code (C, VHDL..) deployable to hardware targets. So, algorithms can be developed in simulink and then integrated into an embedded application without manual translation.

thomasthorpe | 3 years ago | on: I fixed my broken monitor with a hair dryer

Old thread now. But often a minimum load is needed for an LDO, particularly on older parts, to work correctly. Such that these are given in datasheets. This is continuously required so is effectively quiescent current. I think this is what the OP was trying to get at.

But failed capacitor reulting in instability seems much more likely.

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