J
Joerg
Guest
krw@attt.bizz wrote:
That's a good point. How does one find out which ones those are?
Mil stuff is even better, that needs to remain available for decades.
That is the reason why the LM331 is still around and why I used it in a
long-life design many years ago.

--
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/
On Sat, 07 Sep 2013 15:23:39 -0700, Joerg <invalid@invalid.invalid
wrote:
rickman wrote:
On 9/7/2013 4:46 PM, Joerg wrote:
Paul Rubin wrote:
Joerg<invalid@invalid.invalid> writes:
I don't see how the equivalent of a TMS320 or a big MSP430 could fit
into one of these small Lattice devices.
I had thought the parts of those processors that would bloat up badly
(instruction decode etc.) are pretty simple so the overall effect of the
bloat is ok in the scheme of things. The parts doing the most work
(memory, arithmetic) are done in the FPGA hardware (RAM and DSP blocks,
adders connected to the LUT's somehow) as efficiently as on the MCU's.
I do think softcores seem like a silly idea a lot of the time, and am
looking forward to more low end FPGA's with MCU blocks.
Much of it has to do with legacy code. Yes, some things could even be
done more efficiently in the FPGA because you can actually streamline
the HW to the task, something neither uC nor DSP allow. For example, why
have a 32-bit HW multiplier when you know you'll never exceed 23 bits?
But legacy code won't run anymore and you need FPGA specialists to make
it all work.
No, you would need a DSP specialist. The FPGA designer only needs to
know how to code the FPGA.
So for this kind of solution in an FPGA you need a DSP specialist and an
FPGA specialist? That would be a problem.
Pick ones that are in the automotive market. Support for fifteen
years is required.
That's a good point. How does one find out which ones those are?
Mil stuff is even better, that needs to remain available for decades.
That is the reason why the LM331 is still around and why I used it in a
long-life design many years ago.
But that is exactly the point of the FPGA in DSP apps. You code to the
app, not to a processor.
How long do the usual FPGA stay in the market? Meaning plop-in
replaceable, same footprint, same code, no changes.
The usual? About 30 minutes. ;-)
--
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/