Bliiot Technical Glossary for Industrial IoT Terminology

Technical Terms

RK3576 AI Edge Controller
2026-04-14
RK3576 delivers the perfect balance of performance and cost for AIoT, combining an 8-core CPU, 6 TOPS NPU, and rich I/O to handle most edge AI applications efficiently.
DDR4 vs LPDDR4X: How to Choose Memory for Industrial ARM Edge Controllers
2026-04-10
DDR4 and LPDDR4X are not a simple case of “which is better,” but rather two different technical paths tailored to different application scenarios: DDR4 = Stability + Low Latency + Strong Control Capability LPDDR4X = Low Power + High Bandwidth + High Integration
IEC 61131-3 vs IEC 61499
2026-04-08
IEC 61131-3 defined the era of traditional PLCs, while IEC 61499 is leading industrial automation toward a more open and distributed future.
CAN vs CAN FD: A Key Step in Industrial Communication Upgrade
2026-04-03
CAN FD enhances CAN with faster speeds and larger data frames, enabling more efficient, real-time communication and better integration with modern industrial and cloud systems.
DDR4 vs DDR5 on ARM Edge Controllers: Read/Write Speed Differences and Real-World Value
2026-03-31
In the age of industrial edge computing, DDR5 is not just faster memory — it is a key infrastructure that propels ARM controllers toward AI and high-performance applications.
Smart Mobility ARChitecture
2026-01-14
For industrial and edge computing products, SMARC 2.2 offers greater long-term value, while SMARC 2.1.1 remains a reliable and mature choice.
SMARC Module
2026-01-13
A SMARC module is a highly integrated, compact, and energy-efficient "computer core" that standardizes the most complex and rapidly evolving components.
Industrial IoT Gateway: The Intelligent Hub for Connectivity, Computing, and Industrial Transformation
2025-12-18
An Industrial IoT Gateway is a hardware device deployed on the industrial site, close to the data source. It is responsible for connecting various industrial equipment, sensors, controllers (such as PLCs), and more to the cloud or local servers. It possesses core capabilities such as data acquisition, protocol conversion, edge computing, and secure transmission, making it a crucial hub that bridges the gap between devices and higher-level systems in an Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) .

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