Projectr Team Applepie: [work]
"Less baking, more hacking," Honey Crisp grinned, checking the charge on her mag-hammer. "I’m ready to make some crumbs."
The result? Where previous camera projects took 12 months from prototype to silicon, Applepie delivered a working Phyllo Stack on an FPGA in 11 weeks. projectr team applepie
They burst out of the building just as the silent alarm triggered a full lockdown behind them. The team scrambled into the van, tires screeching as they peeled away into the rainy night. "Less baking, more hacking," Honey Crisp grinned, checking
The breakthrough wasn't the split—others had tried multi-sensor arrays. The magic was . Team Applepie developed a custom timing controller (the "Crust Engine") that read each layer not simultaneously but in a staggered rolling shutter, offset by 4 milliseconds per layer. That delay allowed software to compute depth by analyzing when each photon hit its respective layer—essentially a 3D time-of-flight measurement without a separate ToF sensor. They burst out of the building just as
"I’m trying, but the file is self-replicating. It’s like trying to bottle a explosion." Gala paused. "Wait. Someone else is here."
The neon lights of Sector 4 flickered against the rain-slicked pavement. Inside the unmarked van, "Granny" Smith adjusted her tactical visor.