Downed Russian drone used at least 30 chips from Western companies — silicon from Xilinx, TI, Marvell, Micron, and others found in the wreckage - eviltoast

Analysis of Sukhoi S-70 Okhotnik-B drone revealed vital Western components.

  • RonSijm@programming.dev
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    1 month ago

    I’m a bit of a noob in hardware design, so maybe this is a stupid question, but why is a FPGA scary?

    It would seem scarier to me if they actually fabbed an FPGA into an ASIC right? That could maybe indicate they have some kinda plan to mass-produce them, no?

    • grue@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Just that whatever the technological threshold for being included in the sanctions is, every Xilinx chip is complex/advanced/high-performance enough that it would definitely meet it. In other words, unlike with TI chips, you can tell just from the brand name that Russia is definitely not supposed to have it.

      Practically speaking, an FPGA could be acting as anything from an encrypted transceiver to a flight controller to an AI coprocessor. Regardless, though, it’d be a relatively complex unit of functionality – one of the more important chips in the drone, and therefore one of the more important to deny to Russia.