Cambridge Consultants XAP5 Core Sets New Standard for 16-Bit Processors.* New 16-Bit Processor Architecture Offers Advanced Computing Functionality at the Lowest Unit Cost and Lowest Power, Available for Licence from Cambridge Consultants for Use in ASIC (Application Specific Integrated Circuit) Pronounced "a-sick." A chip that is custom designed for a specific application rather than a general-purpose chip such as a microprocessor. Design CAMBRIDGE, England -- Cambridge Consultants has launched its next generation XAP processor A XAP® processor provides the computation element within an Integrated Circuit that has to process digital data. A family of 16- and 32-bit XAP processors have been designed and implemented by Cambridge Consultants Ltd. since 1993. core - XAP XAP Experimental Aerial Platforms 5 - offering wireless and sensor chip designers an advanced level of 16-bit processing performance combined with low energy consumption and efficient use of low cost memory, making it ideally suited for cost-sensitive high-volume products. XAP5 combines the economy of a 16-bit data word with a 24-bit address space for large programs up to 16 Mbytes, which suits devices designed for data-centric communications applications in markets such as consumer, industrial and retail. Typical applications for a XAP5 processor core include ZigBee and Bluetooth wireless networks, energy metering, sensor networks, tagging and transactions using RFID (Radio Frequency IDentification) A data collection technology that uses electronic tags for storing data. The tag, also known as an "electronic label," "transponder" or "code plate," is made up of an RFID chip attached to an antenna. or NFC NFC abbr. National Football Conference , location systems such as GPS and any other embedded ASIC application that requires a robust and capable software environment. XAP5's design is particularly suited to applications such as these with programs stored in non-volatile memory Refers to memory chips that hold their content without power being applied. It may refer to chips that are not changeable, such as ROMs and PROMs, or to chips that can be rewritten many times such as flash memory. , for example; Flash memory that is either embedded in the chip or in a SiP (System in Package). XAP5 is the latest development in Cambridge Consultants' popular family of XAP processor cores which are already operating in over one billion chips worldwide. XAP5 is a perfect fit for battery-powered wireless devices and is also flexible enough to be applied to many other applications including sensors, audio and image processing image processing Set of computational techniques for analyzing, enhancing, compressing, and reconstructing images. Its main components are importing, in which an image is captured through scanning or digital photography; analysis and manipulation of the image, accomplished tasks. Elsewhere, applications for XAP5 include its use as a deeply embedded processor A CPU chip used in a system other than a general purpose workstation, desktop or laptop computer. Such chips are used by the billions every year in a myriad of products. See embedded system. core tasked with managing an IP sub-system, such as an encryption block, within a larger SoC (System on Chip). With its predecessors widely licensed in a variety of high-profile applications, the XAP5 processor core represents the most technically complete offering to date from Cambridge Consultants in terms of its overall specification together with its software development and debugging tools. The new core also benefits from a realistic and attractive approach to licensing in response to the needs of both current and potential licensees. One company that already pre-selected XAP5 is Greenpeak Technologies, a wireless chip company headquartered in the Netherlands, where Cees Links, the CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. , remarked: "After a careful selection procedure we concluded that XAP5 was the best matching and most versatile processor solution for integration in our sensor network communication ASIC. On top of this, the tools, documentation, examples and design-in support are excellent and will help us to get up to speed quickly." The XAP5 processor core is delivered as a soft IP core in Verilog RTL (Register Transfer Level) A high-level hardware description language (HDL) for defining digital circuits. The circuits are described as a collection of registers, Boolean equations, control logic such as "if-then-else" statements as well as complex event sequences; (Register Transfer Level), thus putting the licensee's ASIC engineers in full control of semiconductor process selection, synthesis and layout. Technical features of the processor include very high code density that minimises the size and cost of program memory, high performance (68 Dhrystone MIPS (Million Instructions Per Second) The execution speed of a computer. For example, .5 MIPS is 500,000 instructions per second; 100 MIPS is a hundred million instructions per second. when clocking at 100 MHz (MegaHertZ) One million cycles per second. It is used to measure the transmission speed of electronic devices, including channels, buses and the computer's internal clock. A one-megahertz clock (1 MHz) means some number of bits (16, 32, 64, etc. on a 0.13 micron CMOS (Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor) Pronounced "c-moss." The most widely used integrated circuit design. It is found in almost every electronic product from handheld devices to mainframes. process) and a small footprint of 18k gates, or around one-tenth of a square millimetre of 0.13 micron silicon. The processor also features protected software operating modes that partition user and privileged code for secure, high-availability applications. The processor hardware is supplemented by software and development tools architecture, including a GNU C (language) GNU C - The extension of C compiled by gcc. compiler and assembler, which support a sophisticated programming environment. For example, the XAP5 supports in-place execution of programs that can be located anywhere in memory without the need for linking or copying them to different locations. This means programs can be easily distributed and will start up faster. It also offers a robust update of programs stored in Flash without the risk of losing the system part-way through the update process. Alistair Morfey, Technology Director and Chief Architect of the XAP family at Cambridge Consultants explained: "There is a growing range of applications that need a processor with good performance, but will not tolerate the energy consumption, size and cost of a 32-bit core. Many such applications would have used an 8-bit core, but now these are overwhelmed by growing code size and processing performance requirements. The XAP5's design benefits from our own experience of the ASIC requirements for portable wireless, sensing and medical devices. We've focussed our architecture on the memory architectures typically found in such ASICs. Reducing unit cost and power consumption for sophisticated software applications have been the primary goals." More information and an evaluation version of the software and development tools available for the XAP5 is available for download at www.CambridgeConsultants.com/XAP Notes for editors: Cambridge Consultants develops breakthrough products, creates and licenses intellectual property, and provides business consultancy in technology critical issues for clients worldwide. For nearly 50 years, the Years, The the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109] See : Time company has enabled its clients to turn business opportunities into commercial successes, whether launching first-to-market products, entering new markets or expanding existing markets through the introduction of new technologies. With a team of over 270 engineers, designers, scientists and consultants, in offices in Cambridge (UK) and Boston (USA), Cambridge Consultants offers solutions across a diverse range of industries including medical technology, industrial and consumer products, automotive, transport, energy and wireless communications. For more information visit: www.CambridgeConsultants.com Cambridge Consultants is part of the Altran group of companies. Altran Technologie, which is listed on the Paris Stock Exchange (FR:003463), employs over 17,000 consultants in 20 countries around the world. In 2006 the group generated a turnover of [euro]1,495.6 million. For more information visit: www.altran.com |
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