>By: "Wesley Hosking" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> http://www.atlantek.com.au/picprodigy
I love that aproach to put the sea of gates type programable logic onto the
board next to all that ram
May I ask what Vendor You/They (I didn't get if your part of the developers
or just evaluating for use ?)
use for those In System Programable Chips ?
Any of these ?
Hardware/Electronics
http://www.actel.com/
Non-Volatile Reprogrammable Gate Array
http://www.altera.com
The Altera University Program provides
colleges and universities worldwide with
access to state-of-the-art
development software and programmable logic
devices. With these tools, students
and instructors can solve simple or complex
problems in digital logic design.
http://www.atmel.com/
Atmel is one of the elite new companies
capable of integrating dense nonvolatile
memory, logic and analog functions on a
single chip. Atmel chips are manufactured
using the most advanced wafer processes,
including BiCMOS, CMOS and Silicon
Germanium (SiGe) technologies.
Both the AT6000 and AT40K Series are the
only FPGAs with the ability to implement
Cache Logic design, where part of the FPGA
can be reprogrammed without loss of
register data, while remainder of the FPGA
continues to
http://www.cypress.com/
Cypress introduces the world's largest
CPLDs with the new Delta39K[tm] CPLD
family. Based on a 0.18u process, this
family ranges from 50,000 to 350,000 usable
gates and provides five times the amount of
embedded RAM compared to any other
FPGA available today with similar logic
capacity.
http://www.latticesemi.com/
Lattice/Vantis offers 3.3V PLDs with the
speed and density you need!
Join the Programmable Analog Revolution!
Lattice introduces ispPAC, the in-system
programmable analog device family.
New 5000V Family World's widest PLDs are
available NOW!
http://www.lucent.com/micro/fpga/
The ORCA Series 3 is the new generation of
SRAM-based FPGAs from Lucent
Technologies, with enhancements and
innovations geared toward today's high-speed
designs and tomorrow's systems on a single
chip.
The ORCA Series 3 FPGAs consist of three
basic elements: Programmable Logic
Cells (PLCs), Programmable Input/output
Cells (PICs), and system-level features. An
array of PLCs is surrounded by PICs. Each
PLC contains a Programmable Function
Unit (PFU), a Supplemental Logic and
Interconnect C
http://www.quicklogic.com/
With QuickLogic's new WebASIC program, you
can receive programmed FPGA and
ESP devices at no cost within 24-48 hours
of sending us your design data via the
Internet. Created to speed time to market,
the WebASIC program also offers a way to
solve the performance and pin-locking
problems associated with traditional
SRAM-based FPGAs by allowing you to easily
retarget your designs to QuickLogic
devices.
http://www.xilinx.com/
Xilinx CPLDs are easy to use. Our 5V XC9500
and new 3.3V XC9500XL families
offer the complete solution for designers
today, from performing the simplest of PAL
integration
designs to the more advanced, real-time
hardware field updates. Our customer
proven pin-locking capability, along with
the industry's most advanced JTAG test
capability, means you can now easily
program, test and verify your designs. That
means it's easier and faster to get your
system to market using Xilinx FastFLASHT
See I need to find out a little more about using these high density circuits
and the tools available to program in them so i did a little research
I made these links accesible and publicaly updatable at http://trax.to/win
under Developer Resource
Id love to find out more about this technology and the library elements that
you are developing
So drop a note from time to time about the progress
cheers
Tobias
----- Original Message -----
From: "Wesley Hosking" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, December 11, 2000 21:59
Subject: Re: [V4L] OpenGL Support / Multiple-Input Cards?
> Alan Cox writes:
>
> > > >The second problem is multiple inputs. For stereo applications we
need two
> > > >images, sometimes a third from above for tracking. Are there any
cards out
> > > >there with multiple inputs and linux drivers?
> >
> > I've not seen any that can capture multiple in parallel
> >
>
> We have one in beta at the present time (we are doing the development
> for it under Linux, and will hopefully get someone else to do the
> re-targeting for M$-Win drivers... ). Available in Q1/2001.
>
> http://www.atlantek.com.au/picprodigy/
>
> Hopefully, something like this will also assist with the stereo
> applications....
> (Are they using something like the Census algorithm ? ).
>
> wes
>
>
>
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