Posted: Tue Jun 11, 2002 1:56 pm
I just saw this on another website. Wonder if the next generation of Creamware products will make use of this?
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The Microelectronics and System Institute of the University of Applied Sciences, based in Yverdon, Switzerland, announced a development kit that adds IEEE 1394 connectivity to SHARC DSPs (digital signal processors) from Analog Devices.
The kit can be purchased in two versions: hardware and software. The hardware part adds three serial ports at 400Mbps to an EZ-KIT LITE evaluation board for the 32-bit ADSP-21065L processor from Analog Devices. The kit is connected to the external port of the processor using connectors available on the board. Schematics, documentation and object files of the software part are also included.
The software part contains the complete C source code running on the ADSP21065L. It offers most of the services that are requested to implement IEEE 1394.
The hardware and software parts can be purchased for US$299 each from http://www.jdc.ch, DSP products
____________________________________________
The Microelectronics and System Institute of the University of Applied Sciences, based in Yverdon, Switzerland, announced a development kit that adds IEEE 1394 connectivity to SHARC DSPs (digital signal processors) from Analog Devices.
The kit can be purchased in two versions: hardware and software. The hardware part adds three serial ports at 400Mbps to an EZ-KIT LITE evaluation board for the 32-bit ADSP-21065L processor from Analog Devices. The kit is connected to the external port of the processor using connectors available on the board. Schematics, documentation and object files of the software part are also included.
The software part contains the complete C source code running on the ADSP21065L. It offers most of the services that are requested to implement IEEE 1394.
The hardware and software parts can be purchased for US$299 each from http://www.jdc.ch, DSP products