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Ezurio Carbon AM62 brings TI AM62x, Wi-Fi 6 and medical-ready flexibility to IoT design

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By Yunus Unal


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23 April 2026

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Yunus is a mechatronics engineer with a background in 5G mobile communications and intelligent embedded systems. Before joining TKO and ipXchange, he developed and tested IoT and control-system prototypes that combined hardware design with embedded software. At ipXchange, Yunus applies his engineering knowledge and creative approach to produce technical content and product evaluations.

Not every embedded product needs the biggest processor in the room. A lot of teams need something harder to get right, enough compute, strong connectivity, sensible power use, and a simpler path to integration. That is where Ezurio Carbon AM62 fits.

Ezurio’s new Open Standard Module Medium Form Factor (OSM-MF) system-on-module (SOM) is built around the Texas Instruments (TI) AM623 and AM625 processor families and adds optional wireless through the Sona TI351, based on TI’s CC3351 for Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) 5.4. Ezurio is positioning it for industrial, medical, and commercial internet of things (IoT) products that need flexibility without the overhead of building every subsystem from scratch.

A broad middle ground, not a niche module

One of the more useful things about Ezurio Carbon AM62 is where it sits in the product stack. It is not being sold as a narrow specialist board for one edge artificial intelligence (AI) demo. It is being presented as a general-purpose connected compute platform that can handle medical user interfaces, industrial control, connected devices, and enterprise-style endpoints.

Ezurio says the module combines a quad-core Cortex-A53 processor with dedicated Cortex-M4F and Cortex-R5F cores, plus a dual-core programmable real-time unit (PRU). That matters because many real products need Linux, real-time control, and device management to coexist cleanly. The Carbon AM62 also supports dual displays, camera input, Gigabit Ethernet, controller area network flexible data-rate (CAN-FD), serial buses, and other common embedded interfaces, which makes it broad enough for a lot of practical designs.

Why the wireless piece matters

The wireless side is a big part of the value. Ezurio Carbon AM62 can ship with the Sona TI351, which is based on the TI CC3351 and brings Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) 5.4 into the same module family. In the transcript, Ezurio frames that around use cases such as medical data transfer into backend systems, but the broader advantage is simpler integration.

That matters because the module is not just hardware. Ezurio publicly says it supports customers with software, integration, long-term support, and the connectivity stack around its radios. The company also highlights security and certification support, which can remove a lot of friction for teams trying to get a connected product into the field quickly and cleanly.

A better starting point for development

The development path is also fairly strong. Ezurio’s public evaluation kit includes the Carbon AM62 module, an OSM carrier board, a 7-inch touchscreen, antennas, cables, and optional camera support. Ezurio also points to more than 50 TI reference designs around the wider analogue ecosystem, which gives engineers a useful starting point once they move beyond bring-up.

That is probably the clearest reason to pay attention to Ezurio Carbon AM62. It is not trying to be the flashiest platform on the show floor. It is trying to be a practical one, a compact TI AM62x-based SOM with integrated wireless, solid interface coverage, and enough support around it to shorten the distance between evaluation and a shippable product. For medical, industrial, and connected embedded teams, that is often the more valuable proposition.

Learn more here:
Carbon AM62 EVK – TI Sitara AM62x Evaluation Kit
Carbon AM62 OSM-MF SOM

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