So something that you can do with PDKs is add your own custom standard cell and tell the EDA tools to use them. This is actually pretty smart, this way you can use most of the foundry cells (which have been extensively validated) and focus on things like this "magic multiplier", that you will have to manually validate. This also makes porting across tech nodes easier if you manage only a handful of custom cells versus a completely custom design.
(I have my guesses as to what that is, but I admittedly don't know enough about that particular part of the field to give anything but a guess).
My "only" experience here is designing ASICs for Neuromorphic Chips. We used sub-threshold exclusively for linearity and energy reduction. No standard cells for us
We have been running Ardour 9 for a while now during band rehearsals. Currently 12 channels that we record and monitor in realtime with some effects on top.
My personal idea revolves around "can I run it on a basic smartphone, with whatever the 'floor' for basic smartphones under lets say $300 is for memory (let's pretend RAM prices are normal).
Edit: The fact this runs on a Smartphone means it is highly relevant. My only thing is, how do we give such a model an "unlimited" context window, so it can digest as much as it needs. I know some models know multiple languages, I wouldnt be surprised if sticking to only English would reduce the model size / need for more hardware and make it even smaller / tighter.
Started a comment to write basically what you said. I've been commuting like that for five years. At the end I didn't bother trying anything productive anymore.
Losing 2-3h per day commuting is not something I am gone miss anytime soon.
I still remember when Google (and Facebook?) used XMPP for their chat functions. You could log into any XMPP client and chat with people using Google infrastructure.
Plus at least one motor plus sun tracking controller. All of that has to operate 24/7, all year.
Depending on your local climate, that has to be sun and rain proof. (Most Nema 7 "3D printer" motors are not waterproof... Ask me now I know )
Nothing a quick hack job can't solve for you, but if you want to sell it (and make sure your customers will be satisfied for decades) it quickly adds up in price.
You don't need a motor. You need a recurring calendar reminder to send someone out there to spin them all 2x per year at whatever day you determine to be the ideal crossover point where you want to switch between NS and EW.
The panels can be stayed in their correct positions by a trash tire or whatever buried in the ground with two chains poking out to clip to the panel corner.
None of this is rocket science. This is all stuff that has been proven out over the past 200yr of fence and gate construction.
Similar could be used for changing between tilted and vertical though you'd need more material.