Elektrobit demos automotive Linux at embedded world

Elektrobit is demonstrating its Linux-based functional safety platform for automotive applications at embedded world 2026 in Nuremberg from 10-12 March. The company is showcasing a safe cockpit demo based on EB corbos Linux for Safety Applications, following its recent announcement of Linux-based functional safety in a production-grade automotive platform with Mobileye.

The safe cockpit demonstration, developed with Telechips, Kernkonzept and Qt Group, is powered by the Telechips Dolphin5 automotive system-on-chip. The system renders safety-critical telltales that dynamically appear in the centre cluster and transition to the telltale bar.

Elektrobit says the Mobileye collaboration validated that Linux can be used in safety-relevant automotive systems when combined with the right architecture, safety concepts and integration expertise. The company says the capability is now available as a reusable, licensable safety feature for any Linux environment.

In a statement, Jagan Rajagopalan, Vice President and Head of Strategy and Portfolio at Elektrobit, said: “Together with Mobileye, we showed that Linux-based systems can meet real automotive safety requirements. EB corbos Linux for Safety Applications is the foundation for the next generation of reliable autonomous driving systems.”

Elektrobit is also presenting a digital-twin cockpit demo at the Siemens booth, running on Siemens’ PAVE360 virtual platform and Android-based cockpit hardware. The company says the demonstration shows how OEMs can begin software-defined vehicle development before silicon is available.

Source: Elektrobit