Archive for the ‘Electronics News’ Category

Everyday microcontrollers

Sunday, December 28th, 2008

 

Commercial Product

Think of a car, with an advanced fuel system, anti locking system, electronic windows, electronic seats, cabin control, telemetry, and entrainment system to name a few. Ten years ago, only higher end models of car had these “luxuries”, while the lower end had manual heating/cooling control, levers to move your mirrors and seats.

Most of control of these has mainly been replaced with microcontrollers and associated devices (i.e. motors, solenoids etc). In earlier versions of Apple’s iPod prior to moving to an Apple branded chip, the heart and soul of the iPod was Portal Players PP5xxx system-on-chip microcontroller.

It contained 2 ARM cores and a swag of peripheral connections some being:

·        LCD Controller

·        USB controller

·        Firewire controller

·        Photo LCD controller

·        IDE controller

Due to the extensive peripheral controllers on the chip, this allowed the design of the iPod to be the size and have the elegance we all know and love them to be.

Education of Microcontrollers

At the University of New South Wales(UNSW) early in 2001 we realized that, computer and electrical engineers are required to involve in the design of complex computer-based embedded systems to address highly-specialised and specific applications in aerospace, telecommunications, power-production, manufacturing, defence, and electronics industries.

Applications include consumer electronics (CD and DVD players, televisions, stereos, and gaming devices), advanced microprocessors, peripheral equipment, systems for portable, desktop, and client/server computing, and communications devices (cellular phones, pagers, personal digital assistants). They also include distributed computing environments (local- and wide-area networks, wireless networks, intranets, Internet) and embedded computer systems (such as aircraft, spacecraft, and automobile control systems, in which computers are embedded to perform various functions).

Unfortunately, the education and training of embedded systems in the Australian universities, generally, does not reflect trends in embedded systems design. Typical content in an introductory course in embedded systems and microprocessor design is similar to that of technical institutes, using an 8-bit processor to teach programming in assembly language, implementing trivial interfacing to the outside world on a prototyping board, and performing simple control and measurement experiments. In the middle of 2001, at the University of New South Wales we went through process of review, design, and delivery of a course in modern embedded systems.

The product was an international collaborative teaching project involving the University of New South Wales (Australia), Manchester University, and Imperial College, London University (United Kingdom). This project, being the first of its kind anywhere in the world, provides a learning environment that replicates the current industrial practice in embedded systems design in an easy and comprehensible setting, an environment where the processor, dedicated coprocessors, and software are all integrated to create a functional system such as used in sophisticated electronic devices, including mobile phones, web phones, televisions, digital cameras, and personal digital assistants.

Such collaborations are important in both reducing development costs in developing up-to-date, and increasingly sophisticated, courses and in addressing pedagogical issues that are common between computer and electrical engineering programs in all academic institutions. To assist students’ learning experience, the course is supported with purpose built state-of-the-art programmable hardware and software development platforms, carefully planned laboratory experiments, lecture notes, weekly online quizzes, tutorials, and a companion CD-ROM as a learning tool.

ADI Pays $127M for Integrant Technologies

Wednesday, June 7th, 2006

The move expands ADI’s RF signal processing portfolio, adding low-power mobile TV tuner technology to the Norwood, Mass.-based company’s reach.

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UMC Climbs 31%

Wednesday, June 7th, 2006

The foundry reports continued spring growth in the month of May, which saw revenues climb 31.46 percent year-over-year to $264 million.

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LCD Industry Evolving in Darwinian Fashion

Wednesday, June 7th, 2006

In a similar way to how animals and plants have evolved over time, so too has the LCD industry due to innovation in the form of new applications, new technologies, new manufacturing methods and alternative display solutions, according to LG.Philips LCD Executive VP Bock Kwon.

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Court Certifies Price-Fixing Class-Action Suit

Wednesday, June 7th, 2006

A U.S. District Court judge certified a proposed class-action lawsuit against Micron and a number of other memory giants, claiming the companies illegally conspired on DRAM price fixing.

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Transmeta, AMD Forge Sales Deal

Wednesday, June 7th, 2006

Transmeta has struck a deal with AMD to re-brand and sell a specialized version of Transmeta's Efficeon microprocessor in emerging markets.

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Microprocessor Competition Hits Whole Chip Market

Wednesday, June 7th, 2006

Decreasing average selling prices on processors due to intensified competition led to April’s semiconductor sales figures coming in at the same level as the March figures, according to figures from the SIA and EECA.

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Intel Expands NOR to Embedded Market

Wednesday, June 7th, 2006

At a time when the entire company is undergoing an efficiency review, the chip giant said the NOR moves underscore its commitment to the NOR embedded flash memory market segments.

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GSI Snags KLA-Tencor Exec

Wednesday, June 7th, 2006

GSI Group, a maker of semiconductor manufacturing tools, names Dr. Sergio Edelstein the company's new CEO.

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Lithography Becomes Big Bottleneck

Wednesday, June 7th, 2006

A panel of global experts says the short-term solution for next process nodes may include metal masks, immersion lithography and more litho-friendly designs.

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