ERLANGEN, Germany, March 3, 2026 –Following its recent announcement of Linux-based functional safety in a production-grade automotive platform together with Mobileye, Elektrobit is demonstrating how Linux for automotive safety has progressed from concept to adoption at embedded world in Nuremberg from March 10-12, 2026.
Together with Telechips, Kernkonzept and Qt Group, Elektrobit is showcasing a safe cockpit based on EB corbos Linux for Safety Applications, powered by the Telechips Dolphin5 automotive SoC, an Arm-based heterogeneous compute platform featuring Cortex-A76 CPUs, Mali-G78AE GPU and Ethos-N78 NPU with built-in functional safety. Using Elektrobit’s advanced display solution with Qt Safe Renderer, the system renders rich, safety-critical telltales that dynamically appear in the center cluster and transition seamlessly to the telltale bar.
This intuitive and safety-ready visual experience demonstrates why a high-performance OS like EB corbos Linux for Safety Applications, combined with certified graphics rendering, is essential for next-generation cockpits and in-vehicle infotainment systems. 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. This enhancement builds on this foundation, extending Elektrobit’s proven safety approach beyond a single platform or configuration and making it available as a reusable, licensable safety capability for any Linux environment. Visit Telechips Booth in Hall 4, Booth Number 4-561 to experience EB corbos Linux for Safety Applications in action.
“Together with Mobileye, we showed that Linux-based systems can meet real automotive safety requirements,” said Jagan Rajagopalan, vice president and head of strategy and portfolio, Elektrobit. “EB corbos Linux for Safety Applications is the foundation for the next generation of reliable autonomous driving systems.”
Elektrobit will showcase a new digital-twin cockpit demo on the Siemens booth, presenting its in-vehicle software running both on Siemens’ PAVE360 virtual platform and on Android-based cockpit hardware to highlight how OEMs can begin SDV development pre-silicon. The demonstration underscores Elektrobit’s leadership in Android, Classic AUTOSAR, Adaptive AUTOSAR and SDV-ready cockpit solutions. Visit Siemens in Hall 4, Booth number 530.
Elektrobit is also collaborating with Synopsys and MathWorks showcasing an end-to-end workflow for model-based application development. Using MathWorks tools, developers can build automotive applications that are then seamlessly deployed on EB corbos AdaptiveCore (SDK) – available on the AWS Marketplace and virtualized with the Synopsys Virtualizer Development Kit. This represents a smarter, faster path to vehicle software development and hints at what’s next for AI-enabled automotive innovation. Visit the Synopsys booth at Hall 4, Booth 4-208 to experience the solution.
On March 10 at noon, Elektrobit senior expert Dr. Oliver Pajonk will take the stage at the Embedded World Conference to explore “A Complete Open-Source, Functionally Safe Software Stack for the Software-Defined Vehicle.”
Oliver Pajonk will explain how Eclipse S CORE, an open‑source middleware framework, can be seamlessly integrated into a Linux‑based operating system designed for safety‑critical automotive applications, creating an open, powerful and certifiable software platform for future software‑defined vehicles. Achieving this level of certifiability requires the alignment of environmental assumptions, qualified toolchains, supervised IPC and the proper integration of lifecycle and safety components to ensure robust end‑to‑end system integrity. With these foundations in place, S CORE provides a modular open‑source base capable of supporting both functional and safety‑critical automotive workloads. State‑of‑the‑art engineering approaches – such as everything‑is‑code, continuous integration, development containers and modern IDEs—enable developers to experience Eclipse S CORE on Linux for Safety Applications directly from the browser, reflecting the expectations of today’s automotive software engineers.
Key members of the Elektrobit team attending Embedded World 2026 include Dr. Siegfried Dirr and Isaac Trefz. To learn more or schedule a demonstration, please reach out to Public.Relations@elektrobit.com
About Elektrobit
Elektrobit is the trusted partner in the transition to the software-defined vehicle (SDV). With over 35 years of award-winning automotive software expertise, Elektrobit’s innovative portfolio and comprehensive SDV ecosystem empower OEMs, Tier 1s, along with ODMs and Big Tech to build future-ready solutions with speed and confidence. Its SDV building blocks include operating systems, middleware, embedded software, digital cockpit solutions, engineering services, and development workflows – driving faster innovation and seamless integration across the vehicle lifecycle. Elektrobit software powers over five billion devices in more than 630 million vehicles worldwide. It is a wholly owned, independently operated subsidiary of AUMOVIO.
Media contact
Paul Entwistle
Global Public Relations, Elektrobit
Phone: +49 160 3660509
Email: Public.Relations@elektrobit.com


