Processors

Stretch Announces Second-generation Software Configurable Processor

On March 5, Stretch, Inc. announced its second-generation software configurable processor family, the S6000, and two initial chips. With this offering—its first since the appointment last year of a new CEO—Stretch is mainly targeting video surveillance, video broadcast, and WiMAX basestation applications. The S6000, like the previous-generation S5000 family, is a RISC processor which incorporates a reconfigurable compute fabric within its datapath. The fabric (which Stretch calls ISEF) Read more...

BDTI Evaluates TI’s DaVinci Evaluation Module

Last month BDTI published a white paper detailing the results of its analysis of Texas Instruments’ Digital Video Evaluation Module (DVEVM).  The DVEVM is one component of TI's “DaVinci” digital video platform, which also includes video-oriented chips, off-the-shelf multimedia codec software, development tools, and APIs.   BDTI's evaluation focuses on whether the DVEVM is straightforward to use, how well it supports application prototyping, and whether it provides system designers with enough Read more...

Case Study: Increasing the Visibility of Your Products

However compelling a new product may be, it won’t succeed unless prospective customers know about it. Achieving customer awareness can be particularly challenging for small companies that lack multi-million-dollar marketing budgets, but it can also pose a challenge for established companies entering new markets. An effective way for technology providers to boost visibility of their products is through BDTI’s benchmarking and analysis services. BDTI publishes its respected independent benchmark Read more...

FPGAs vs. DSPs: A look at the unanswered questions

Posted in FPGAs, Processors
Write the first comment.
BDTI recently completed an in-depth analysis of FPGAs’ suitability for DSP applications. We found that, in some high-performance signal processing applications, FPGAs have several significant advantages over high-end DSP processors.  Our recent benchmark results (shown in Figure 1), for example, have shown that high-end, DSP-oriented FPGAs have a huge throughput advantage over high-performance DSP processors for certain types of signal processing. And FPGAs, which are not constrained by a Read more...

BDTI Certifies ARC Video Subsystem H.264 Decode Performance

This month BDTI and silicon intellectual property licensor ARC International announced completion of BDTI Solution Certification™ of the H.264 video decode performance of the ARC Video Subsystem.  The ARC Video Subsystem, the first product to be certified under BDTI’s Solution Certification Service, is a programmable subsystem capable of supporting multiple video standards.  In certifying the solution, BDTI has independently verified its performance using proprietary BDTI bitstreams and Read more...

Stream Processors Unveils Data-parallel Processor Architecture

Stream Processors, Inc. (SPI) this week unveiled its data-parallel processor architecture and announced two chips based on the architecture.  According to SPI, its architecture is optimized for compute-intensive embedded applications which exhibit a high degree of data parallelism, such as video and imaging.  SPI believes that cost-performance and developer productivity advantages will enable its chips to compete successfully against FPGAs, high-end DSPs, and ASICs in these applications. Read more...

Case Study: Cool Algorithm, But Will It Fit in My Product?

Algorithms are the essence of digital signal processing; they are the mathematical “recipes” that transform signals in useful ways. Companies developing new DSP algorithms, or considering purchasing or licensing algorithms, often need to assess whether the algorithm will fit within their processing budget–and thereby within their cost and power consumption targets.    But estimating an algorithm’s processing load can be difficult if the algorithm has not already been carefully mapped onto Read more...

Jeff Bier’s Impulse Response—Signal Processing Isn't a Commodity

At the Consumer Electronics Show last month I was struck (not for the first time) by the number of consumer electronics products that rely on digital signal processing—at this point, nearly all of them. In fact, so many of today's products incorporate digital signal processing-based functions that it's tempting to start viewing these functions as commodities. But in most cases, DSP functions aren't going to become commodities anytime soon. They may be ubiquitous, but they're not Read more...

Measuring Performance of DSP Code

Measuring the performance of real-time digital signal processing code is essential.  But whether you're using a simulator or hardware, it can be a headache to get accurate, repeatable performance measurements.  In this article we'll cover some of the common pitfalls you might encounter, and present some techniques for working around them. Why Measure? Digital signal processing applications typically have tight speed and cost constraints, and may also have challenging real-time deadlines. In Read more...

Freescale Unveils Dual-Core Audio DSPs

Write the first comment.
On January 3rd, Freescale announced the first dual-core members of its Onyx family of audio DSPs.  The first two chips in the family, the DSP56720 and DSP56721, feature two DSP5636x cores operating at 200 MHz.  The chips mainly target high-definition audio processing in next-generation DVD players. To this end, Freescale offers DSP5636x software implementing audio decoders supported by the HD-DVD and Blue-Ray standards, including Dolby Digital+, Dolby TrueHD, and DTS-HD.  In addition to DVD Read more...