scale
> and enjoyed a resurgence with Starcore based devices. Starcore technology
> has always looked quite promising, but in
> my opinion, in day-to-day execution Freescale has not been able to match TI.
> Now TI has out the C667x series, which
> leaps beyond MSC815x/MSC825x.
>
> No
Don-
> Hi Jeff: interesting reply. I remember when TI and MOT did exactly the
> opposite. TI had the 9900 processor series that was much better than
> anything on the market, and essentially blew it off. MOT had the
> 6800/68000 series, that became moderately successful. The most crippled
> proces
Hi Jeff: interesting reply. I remember when TI and MOT did exactly the
opposite. TI had the 9900 processor series that was much better than
anything on the market, and essentially blew it off. MOT had the
6800/68000 series, that became moderately successful. The most crippled
processor of the time,
terms of
customer support, from what TI is doing in smart phones, tablets,
high-performance ARM, etc.
-Jeff
> -Original Message-
> From: Alexander Chemeris
> To: Gnuradio-discuss
> Sent: Fri, Jan 28, 2011 10:24 am
> Subject: [Discuss-gnuradio] TI vs Freescale DSP for open
profit company and a supplier of tools for the open source community. I don't
have experience with freescale but my experience with TI has been a positive
one.
al fayez
-Original Message-
From: Alexander Chemeris
To: Gnuradio-discuss
Sent: Fri, Jan 28, 2011 10:24 am
Subject:
Hi Alexander,
On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 10:14 AM, Alexander Chemeris
wrote:
> 2) Development tools price
> Both Freescale CodeWarrior and TI Code Composer seem to be at the same
> line with about $2K per single license (correct me if I'm wrong - I
> may have missed something easily).
>
> Big minus
Hello all,
We're working on an open-source WiMAX receiver/scanner and we're
looking into using a high-performance DSP to process data from USRP.
Right now we implement this processing in FPGA, but we want to
experiment with DSPs too. I know there are skilled people here and I'm
looking forward to