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Wisetip

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Wisetip specialises in compact and versatile display modules including character and graphic LCDs, TFT panels and OLED displays. Their products are designed for ease of integration into industrial, medical, and consumer systems where clarity, reliability and space efficiency are critical. With a strong focus on display performance and format flexibility, Wisetip enables engineers to build user interfaces tailored to a wide range of embedded applications.

Product Range

Displays

Character Modules
Graphic Modules
LCD Display (TFT)
OLED Displays / Modules

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Automotive Qualified

Image of high tech automotive wire frame to demonstrate Ineltek's Automotive Component Manufacturers and their Applications

Power, Timing and Passives

Image of various electronic signals to demonstrate Ineltek's Power Passive and Timing Component capabilities

Displays, Accessories and Optoelectronics

Image of a close up of LED screen to demonstrate Ineltek's Displays and Accessories capabilities

Semiconductor

Image of close up of wafer level Semiconductor to demonstrate Ineltek's semiconductor component capability

Memory

Image of close up of DDR Ram to illustrate Ineltek's Memory solutions

Solutions & Services

Image of a close up of an ASIC design to depict Ineltek's solutions and services capability

Tech Docs

To view technical docs or find out more about

Wisetip

HopeRF Pressure Sensors: How to Choose the Right Sensor for Domestic Appliance Design

To find out more...

Introduction: Why Pressure Sensing Matters in Modern Domestic Appliances For most of its history, a domestic appliance did one job. A gas meter counted gas. A blood pressure monitor inflated a cuff. A coffee machine pushed water through grounds. Today, those same devices are expected to connect to the cloud, respond to safety events in real time, operate for years on a single battery, and report data accurately enough for billing purposes. Pressure sensing is central to all of it. Whether it...

Hacking 7,000 Robot Vacuums by Accident Exposes IoT Security Vulnerabilities: How SEALSQ Can Fix It

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The Accidental Hacking of 7,000 Robot Vacuums proves that manufacturers are still shipping IoT-enabled products with serious security vulnerabilities Sammy Azdoufal just wanted to steer his new DJI Romo robot vacuum with a video game controller. While building his own remote-control app with the help of an AI coding assistant, he reverse-engineered how the vacuum communicated with DJI's cloud servers in order to extract an authentication token. That token, it turned out, worked for rather...
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