SECO unveils the SECO Pi Vision 10.1 CM5 powered by Raspberry Pi
''With SECO Pi Vision 10.1, we bring the power and versatility of Raspberry Pi to the industrial world, offering a robust, scalable, and intelligent HMI solution designed for real-world applications'.' — Massimo Mauri, CEO of SECO
AREZZO, ITALY, February 14, 2025 / EINPresswire.com / -- SECO S.p.A. ('SECO') and Raspberry Pi Ltd ('Raspberry Pi') are excited to announce the presentation of the cutting-edge Human-Machine Interface (HMI) solution, the SECO Pi Vision 10.1 CM5 powered by Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5, at embedded world 2025, the premier trade show for embedded technologies taking place from March 11-13 in Nuremberg, Germany. This new integrated solution underscores the companies' shared commitment to innovation in the industrial IoT sector and will be showcased at the SECO booth in Hall 1, Booth 320 and at the Raspberry Pi booth in Hall 3A, Booth 138.
The SECO Pi Vision 10.1 CM5 is a versatile and modular 10.1-inch HMI designed to meet the evolving needs of industrial applications. Built around Raspberry Pi Compute Module 5 (CM5) and integrating the Clea IoT Software suite, it merges SECO's expertise in hardware engineering and IoT software with Raspberry Pi's advanced computing technology, delivering outstanding performance and flexibility.
The SECO Pi Vision 10.1 CM5 serves as a comprehensive development platform for OEMs and startups looking to create next-generation solutions. Equipped with an industrial-grade display, it facilitates a smooth path from prototype to mass production. With built-in support for IoT and AI applications, its modular design enables tailored solutions, with SECO streamlining integration in just a few months.
By combining Raspberry Pi's ecosystem and high-performance technology with SECO's industrial expertise, SECO Pi Vision 10.1 enables OEMs and system integrators to rapidly deploy intelligent HMI solutions with long-term reliability and broad software compatibility across a diverse range of industries. Key applications include industrial automation, with factory control panels, machine interfaces, and SCADA systems; transportation and logistics, such as fleet management terminals, warehouse automation, and public transport displays; and smart retail, including interactive kiosks and point-of-sale (POS) systems, offering intuitive HMI interfaces for enhanced usability.
Clea OS, built on Yocto OS, powers the SECO Pi Vision 10.1 CM5 with secure fleet management, real-time data processing, and edge AI capabilities. Fully integrated with the Clea IoT Suite, it ensures secure boot, encryption, and seamless AI model deployment, retraining, and redeployment across diverse hardware, enabling intelligent IoT-driven automation.
At embedded world 2025, SECO and Raspberry Pi will showcase a Clea-powered industrial control panel on the SECO Pi Vision 10.1 at their respective booths. The demo will feature a Clea Portal app displaying real-time data collected from industrial device sensors, providing actionable insights into system performance and efficiency.
'With SECO Pi Vision 10.1, we bring the power and versatility of Raspberry Pi to the industrial world, offering a robust, scalable, and intelligent HMI solution designed for real-world applications', said Massimo Mauri, CEO of SECO. 'This collaboration with Raspberry Pi strengthens our commitment to delivering innovative and accessible industrial technologies, bridging the gap between rapid prototyping and full-scale production'.
Eben Upton, CEO of Raspberry Pi, said, 'Our growing range of Raspberry Pi Compute Module products makes it easy for industrial and embedded customers to integrate Raspberry Pi technology into custom products. We are excited to work with our partners at SECO to bring the power of Compute Module 5 to even more innovative applications. Pi Vision 10.1 will allow product designers to rapidly develop and deploy high-performance industrial-grade HMI solutions across a wide range of sectors'.
SECO and Raspberry Pi invite attendees to visit their booths (Hall 1, Booth 320, and Hall 3A, Booth 138) during embedded world 2025 to explore the capabilities of the SECO Vision 10.1 CM5 and witness its potential firsthand.
SECO
+39 0575 26979
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Swiss Face 72-Hour Race to Lower Trump's ‘Absurd' 39% Tariff
(Bloomberg) -- The Swiss government held crisis talks on Monday to come up with a proposal that might dissaude US President Donald Trump from imposing 39% tariffs on the country in less than three days. We Should All Be Biking Along the Beach Seeking Relief From Heat and Smog, Cities Follow the Wind Chicago Curbs Hiring, Travel to Tackle $1 Billion Budget Hole NYC Mayor Adams Gives Bally's Bronx Casino Plan a Second Chance With the rate — the highest among industrial nations — set to go into effect on Aug. 7, President and Finance Minister Karin Keller-Sutter convened an emergency meeting of the governing Federal Council on Monday to discuss how to proceed. Separately, negotiators with the Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs have reached out to their US counterparts to try and find a way forward. The agency, which hammered out a far more favorable tentative deal with the US more than a month ago, also held a briefing with business leaders on Monday. Keller-Sutter, who was criticized in the Swiss press over the weekend for allowing Trump to blindside her without a backup plan, said she would be willing to make a last-minute trip to Washington if she thought there was a chance a deal could be made. 'I don't rule out such a visit, but first, the two sides should come closer together in their positions,' she told the newspaper Schweiz am Wochenende. It's not clear what, if any, response there has been from the US government. 'It's unfortunate that the Swiss took so much time' to react, says Thomas Borer, a former Swiss diplomat who now runs his own consulting firm, echoing the criticism made in the press. Despite the backlash, the Swiss president doesn't face any immediate danger of losing her job. The system is designed for continuity, and the presidency rotates on an annual basis, meaning her term running the country will come to a close at the end of the year. The Trump administration justified Friday's move by claiming that Switzerland had in essence stolen money from the US and should therefore be hit with a tariff rate commensurate with the trade deficit — a notion Ketter-Sutter dismissed as 'absurd.' Switzerland ran a $38 billion bilateral trade surplus with the US last year, according to US Census data, which was the 13th biggest for the world's largest economy. While Swiss exports to the US collapsed after the introduction of tariffs in April, they rebounded in June, suggesting that trade between the two countries remained robust. What Bloomberg Economics Says... 'We estimate that this represents a tariff shock of around 23 percentage points for the Swiss economy, putting roughly 1% of its GDP at risk over the medium term.' -Jean Dalbard, economist. For full React, click here There are not many routes available to Switzerland, but one is to offer to buy liquefied natural gas from the US. While the landlocked country is focused on hydroelectric and nuclear power, it does use a small amount of gas, primarily in the winter to cushion swings in its energy supply. Should Switzerland choose to import more gas, it would have to travel through neighboring countries, which could potentially increase transit costs. So far, the expectation appears to be that Keller-Sutter and the government will secure a better deal. The Swiss market benchmark SMI was down just 0.43% as of 11:37 a.m. on Monday. 'We expect negotiations to bring the 39% Swiss tariff rate closer to the 15% agreed with the EU,' Lombard Odier investment strategists said in a research note. 'In the unlikely event that this trade dispute is not resolved,' they added, they will revise their forecast for gross domestic product. Given the 'volatility of decisions we've seen from the US,' there's hope that a solution may be found, Franziska Ryser, a lawmaker of the Green party, told Bloomberg. 'On the other hand, we must draw political conclusions from the situation and acknowledge that — at least under the Trump administration — America is no longer a reliable partner,' she said. 'This means that we should strengthen cooperation with the EU and coordinate more closely with our European partners.' --With assistance from Dylan Griffiths and Anna Shiryaevskaya. How Podcast-Obsessed Tech Investors Made a New Media Industry Russia Builds a New Web Around Kremlin's Handpicked Super App Everyone Loves to Hate Wind Power. Scotland Found a Way to Make It Pay Off What's Really Behind Those Rosy GDP Numbers? Cage-Free Eggs Are Booming in the US, Despite Cost and Trump's Efforts ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Sign in to access your portfolio


The Verge
4 days ago
- The Verge
Today I'm toying with tiny Game Boys.
Posted Jul 31, 2025 at 8:04 PM UTC Today I'm toying with tiny Game Boys. From the makers of TinyTV: the $50 Thumby Color and $30 Thumby. Raspberry Pi Pico chips run at just in the low hundred MHz, displays are 0.85 or 0.4 inches respectively! But that's enough for MicroPython games you can code in a web browser, or even real Doom on the OG Thumby (find installers here). More in my full story. Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates. Sean Hollister Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All by Sean Hollister Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Gadgets Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Gaming Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Nintendo Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Toys


The Verge
4 days ago
- The Verge
Thumby Color micro-review: a delightfully tiny GBA clone that doesn't play Nintendo
It's always a risk betting on new video game hardware from a little-known company: what if game developers never show up? But the $50 Thumby Color, on sale this week, is an easier sell — the two-inch handheld is cute as a button, fits on your keychain, lets aspiring programmers build and publish games right on the web, and I'm finding it so much easier to play than the tinier $30 original! Here's my video comparing the two and showing off playable takes on Tetris, Connect 4, Minesweeper, Doom, Bust-a-Move, 2048, and more: Where the original Thumby uses a 133MHz Raspberry Pi RP2040 to power a black-and-white screen measuring just 0.4 inches diagonally, with a mere 1.4MB of space for games, the new Thumby Color can double the clockspeed with its RP2350 chip, has double the screen at 0.85 inches, and nearly 10 times the storage at around 14MB usable space. As you may have just seen, that isn't a lot of power, but it's enough to wow in such a tiny package. (Yes, there's legitimately a real, playable copy of Doom running on the original Thumby thanks to Graham Sanderson, with tweaks by James Brown, and you can install it here yourself!) The original Thumby was so difficult to play. Forget thumbs, I needed to use my thumbnails to press its buttons and D-pad, and I practically needed a magnifying glass to tell the tetrominoes (Tetris shapes) apart on its 1-bit OLED. Thankfully, the Thumby Color's D-pad actually has a tangible pivot point. It's stiff, but I can actually roll it with a thumb! Now all those original Thumby games (the color is backwards compatible!) and new Color games have moderately usable controls — and when you add the 16-bit color LCD screen at 128 x 128 resolution, it's far easier to make out those pixels. Especially when each tetromino gets its own color. The Thumby Color also has new shoulder buttons a la Game Boy Advance — which are so much easier to actuate than face buttons at this size that I hope TinyCircuits will let us remap them to A and B for original Thumby titles. For now, they're underused by current games, as are the new rumble motor and speaker. One obvious win is a new USB-C port for data and charging; no more digging out a micro-USB cable like the original. And you'll want that cable. TinyCircuits estimates a battery life of just two hours, and I saw the Color's LED indicator signal low battery every time I took it for an extended play session. I won't pretend there's a lot to play on a Thumby Color yet, any more than there was on an original Thumby when it first came out. But I didn't have to look hard to find fun. I'd definitely whip one out for a quick game of trick shot pool (ComboPool for Thumby Color), the relaxing zen of my tiny sand and water garden (Sand for Thumby Color), or the novelty of challenging someone to the tiniest game of two-player Pong (2pddl42ppl for OG Thumby). You can browse previews of every Thumby Color game here and every OG Thumby game here, and even try playing the latter titles in a web emulator (click the game, then click 'open') so you see what you're getting. The website also handles updates and loading games onto your Thumby, and power users can connect and upload files with Thonny as well. It feels like the Thumby Color is launching a touch early. It's slower than the original Thumby to boot, and its UI is slower to scroll through games than I'd like, which would be helpful considering how many more it can fit. Some original Thumby games also crashed at launch for me. 'I hear your criticisms, we do have an update planned for later this summer that address some of these,' TinyCircuits founder Ken Burns tells me. Call them novelties, call them stocking stuffers, but the Thumby and Thumby Color are cool; like the company's TinyTV, I'd gladly be gifted one, and I could see buying one if I enjoyed programming and wanted to create a tiny game of my own. I'm also eager to see what other shenanigans Thumby Color owners manage to pull: the RP2350 chip is technically capable of SNES and Game Boy Color emulators elsewhere, as well as a fast full-color version of Doom. Though if you want emulation in a Game Boy Advance package, and don't mind potentially supporting piracy, there's also Anbernic to look at. Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All by Sean Hollister Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Gaming Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Hands-on Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Nintendo Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Reviews Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Tech