Processors

Inside DSP on Video: Squeeze Play—How Video Compression Works

Digital video compression/decompression algorithms (codecs) are at the heart of many modern video products, from DVD players to multimedia jukeboxes to video-capable cell phones. Understanding the operation of video compression algorithms is essential for developers of the systems, processors, and tools that target video applications. In this article, we explain the operation and characteristics of video codecs and the demands codecs make on processors. We also explain how codecs differ from Read more...

Inside DSP on Video: Video—Coming Soon to a Processor Near You

Posted in Processors, Video
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Digital video is fast becoming the new killer app in signal processing. From surveillance cameras to personal video recorders, from HDTV to the home PC, digital video seems to be everywhere. This boom in video-capable products is good news for programmable chip vendors. Video compression algorithms like MPEG-2 and H.264 are extremely computationally demanding. In the past, system designers met this demand with fixed-function hardware, such as off-the-shelf MPEG-2 decoder chips. Although Read more...

TI Moves ‘C64x to 90 Nanometers, 1 GHz

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Texas Instruments announced in January that it has migrated its high-performance fixed-point DSP architecture, the TMS320C64x, to a 90 nanometer process. Three of the existing ’C64x family members—the TMS320C6414, TMS320C6415, and TMS320C6416—are now being fabricated in the 90 nm process and execute at up to 1 GHz. Pricing starts at $189 for the 1 GHz ’C6414 in 10K quantities. Earlier ’C64x family members were fabbed in a 130 nm process and executed with a top speed of 720 MHz. TI states Read more...

Analog Devices Introduces Eight New Blackfin Chips

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In January, Analog Devices announced that it is significantly expanding its lineup of Blackfin DSP chips by adding eight new members to the family. (Blackfin is Analog Devices’ low-power, dual-MAC, 16-bit fixed-point architecture.) The new family members execute at speeds of up to 750 MHz (increased from the previous top speed of 600 MHz) and include the first dual-core member of the family. Three of the chips—including the dual-core device—target multimedia applications; one targets wireless Read more...

Jeff Bier’s Impulse Response—Stuck in the Past

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Vendors announcing new signal-processing chips tend to brag about the clock speed of the processor core, just as they did ten years ago. “Look at our hot new processor!” they proclaim. “It’s got lots and lots of Hertz!” But in embedded applications—just as in PC applications—comparing chip performance solely on the basis of core clock speeds never tells the whole story. In fact, it can be downright misleading. The performance of today’s highly integrated chips isn’t just a function of the Read more...

Inside DSP on Audio: Inside a Modern Digital Audio Product

Posted in Audio, Processors
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The last decade has seen consumer audio products from home theater systems to car stereos and portable players go digital. These complicated devices play back compressed audio formats, compensate for room acoustics, and add effects such as reverberation, equalization, and dynamic bass, thanks to the power of digital signal processing. How do manufacturers pack the DSP punch these applications require into small, affordable, and power-efficient systems? A portable audio player, for example, Read more...

Inside DSP on Audio: Digital Audio Technology Guide

Posted in Audio, Processors
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The digital audio product Digital audio products are complex systems, comprised of numerous software and hardware subsystems. If you've already read "Anatomy of a Modern Digital Audio Product" you've seen many of these subsystems and how they work together. At the heart of the digital audio system is a microprocessor tasked with rendering audio. In this article we'll take a look at key processor options and processor selection criteria for consumer audio products. We'll examine the various Read more...

Inside DSP: A New Slant—Welcome to InsideDSP

CMP Media and BDTI are pleased to introduce Inside[DSP], an innovative new series of periodic supplements to EE Times. Each Inside[DSP] supplement will focus on the digital signal-processing technology behind a particular end-equipment market. These will include product categories such as consumer audio and video, mobile multimedia devices, automotive signal-processing applications, and communications equipment. “What?” you say, “Another trade publication? Don't these guys understand that I' Read more...

ParthusCeva Rolls Out New Name, New Core

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Last month ParthusCEVA, Inc. announced it would change its name to CEVA, Inc. Along with the name change, the company is shifting its focus to providing signal-processing application solutions based on its DSP cores. These moves come as part of a series of changes for the company, which was formed about a year ago by the merger of Parthus Technologies with the DSP core licensing division of DSP Group. Since the merger, the company has moved its headquarters from Dublin, Ireland to San Jose, Read more...

Analog Devices Announces New SHARCs for Audio

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Today Analog Devices announced four new members of its SHARC family. These new chips primarily target audio applications, and have a variety of audio-specific peripherals and I/O ports. The new chips include the ADSP-21266, ’21267, ’21364, and ’21365. The ’21266 and ’21267 primarily target car audio systems. The ’21266 is currently sampling at 150 MHz, and the ’21267 will begin sampling at 200 MHz in the first quarter of 2004. The ’21364 and ’21365 target high-performance car and Read more...