This feature explores the evolution from the elegant "blackboard" mathematics of Hamming and Reed-Solomon to the high-throughput reality of LDPC (Low-Density Parity-Check) and Polar codes . We aren't just looking at the what (the math), but the how (the circuitry). Key Discussion Pillars:
From the deep-space telemetry of NASA’s Voyager to the NAND flash controllers in your pocket, we trace how specific architectures are tailored for their environments. For example, why does a satellite need a different "architectural DNA" than a fiber-optic cable? Coding Theory: Algorithms, Architectures and Ap...
In the age of 6G and autonomous vehicles, "eventually correct" isn't good enough. We examine how modern architectures use massive parallelism to achieve sub-microsecond latency. This feature explores the evolution from the elegant
Traditionally, mathematicians wrote the codes and engineers built the chips. Today, the most successful codes are "hardware-friendly"—designed from day one to minimize routing congestion and power consumption on the silicon floor. For example, why does a satellite need a