Internet of Things: Lime Microsystems

Canonical

on 19 March 2015

This article was last updated 6 years ago.


What happens when you combine Snappy Ubuntu Core with innovative and highly programmable radio solutions from Lime Microsystems? You provide developers with a foundation on which to create and implement exciting and novel applications for the wireless infrastructure of the future.

Lime Micro has set about providing access to highly programmable radio devices to a large community of developers, to spark invention around connected devices. The company’s Field Programmable RF (FPRF) transceivers are currently deployed in a wide variety of wireless applications, including consumer, M2M, military, emergency services and wireless infrastructure.

Jimmy Chin, Head of Special Projects, Lime Microsystems said: “Ubuntu provides a reliable, low cost and secure infrastructure – key for the future growth of IoT and wireless communications overall. Lime technologies can cater for any frequency and standard while lowering the cost of radio access networks. This combination will spur true innovation amongst developers.”

We can’t wait to see the results.

Open source is what we do

We believe in the power of open source software. Besides driving projects like Ubuntu, we contribute staff, code and funding to many more.

Read about the projects we support ›

Newsletter signup

Get the latest Ubuntu news and updates in your inbox.

By submitting this form, I confirm that I have read and agree to Canonical's Privacy Policy.

Related posts

Canonical announces Ubuntu Pro for WSL 

Ubuntu Pro for WSL provides turnkey security maintenance and enterprise support for Ubuntu 24.04 LTS WSL instances in Windows. The subscription will also...

AMI and Canonical announce partnership

Today, Canonical, the publisher of Ubuntu, announced a partnership with AMI, a provider of Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) solutions, allowing...

Canonical announces optimized Ubuntu images for Google Cloud’s Axion N4A Virtual Machines

Today Canonical, the publishers of Ubuntu, and Google Cloud announced the immediate availability of optimized Ubuntu images for the new Axion-based N4A...