a techfocus media publication :: February 26, 2008 :: volume X, no. 08

FROM THE EDITOR

I caught the motion blur out of the corner of my eye, but something told me it was unusual.  Before I could turn my head and focus - whatever it was had disappeared around the corner.  My curiosity forced me into a run, and I jogged to the edge of the parking lot to get a better look at – whatever I had seen.  My hand instinctively went to my pocket, retrieving my smart phone, and I flipped on video record mode without even looking as I emerged into the alleyway that separated the forest from the supermarket parking lot.

Back in my living room, I connected an HDMI cable from my smartphone to my flat screen TV and hit “play”.  Because I didn’t have a zoom lens,the figure was very small in the video image.  Thanks to the 1080p resolution, however, I could clearly make out the features of Sasquatch for a couple of seconds as he disappeared into the woods.  If not for MIPS new HDMI solution for mobile SoC designers, I never would have been able to see that image of my future fantasy.  Our latest feature has the details.

Thanks for reading! If there's anything we can do to make our publications more useful to you, please let us know at: comments@embeddedtechjournal.com. If you'd rather sound off in public, please post your comments or questions in our new Journal Forums.

Kevin Morris – Editor
Embedded Technology Journal

EVENTS and ANNOUNCEMENTS

Mentor Graphics’ inFact testbench automation solution is the first to use intelligent algorithms to synthesize meaningful testbench sequences while allowing the user to set verification goals prior to simulation and determine verification priorities. inFact simulation can realize a 10x gain in overall verification productivity.
Learn more.


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LATEST NEWS

February 26, 2008

Mercury Computer Systems Expands Multicore Hardware and Software Offerings for Comprehensive, Flexible HPC Solutions

Microsoft's Embedded Offerings Extended to Smaller, More Resource-Constrained Devices

Atmel's AVR XMEGA Redefines System Performance for 8/16-bit Microcontrollers

Microchip Technology Unites MIPS Technologies' Analog and Processor IP in Latest 32-bit PIC32 MCU Release

ARM Enhances Development Support for Texas Instruments' Davinci(TM) Technology and OMAP35x(TM) Platform

congatec AG and SECO Unveil New Form Factor for Next Generation Embedded Computing: Qseven

The Industry’s First Com Express Module Based on Intel’s Menlow Platform is Unveiled

Freescale Helps Consumer and Industrial Developers Get up and Running Quickly with USB Connectivity

BSQUARE Develops First Windows Embedded CE Board Support Package for ARM Cortex-A8 Processor, Supporting TI’s OMAP35xTM Evaluation Module

Plurality Completes R&D Of Its HAL-256 Multicore Processor

Microchip Technology Expands 32-bit PIC32 MCU Family With USB On-The-Go Functionality and Boosts Performance to 80 MHz

Freescale MRAM Rockets into Space

Toshiba Embedded World 2008 - Microprocessor combines 32-bit ARM processor with graphics control and processing functionality to simplify multimedia applications

Timesys Announces Embedded Linux Support for Atmel AT91SAM9RL Microcontrollers

February 25, 2008

NXP announces world’s smallest high-performance MOSFET

Micrium Adds Failsafe Operation to uC/FS FAT and FAT-Free File System Software

VIA Demos Smaller, Cooler x86 Platforms at Embedded World 2008

Zilker Labs Introduces Industry’s Most Adaptive Digital Power Controllers for Efficiency-Sensitive Applications

Quanta Computer Selects AMCC’s QT2025 10GbE PHY for Its High Density Switching Platform

February 22, 2008

Freescale Announces Finalists in its First Green FTF Design Challenge

Trango Hypervisor Virtualizes Atmel's CAP Customizable Microcontroller

Freescale Spotlights Advances in Embedded Connectivity and Intelligence at Embedded World

February 21, 2008

Trango Hypervisor Virtualizes Atmel's CAP Customizable Microcontroller

Introducing the First Book to Cover One of the Hottest Subjects In Wireless Communications Today, “Mobile WiMAX”

IAR Systems and SEGGER announce flash breakpoints functionality in IAR Embedded Workbench for ARM

3DLABS Announces Microsoft Windows CE BSP for its DMS-02 Media-Rich Applications Processor

February 20, 2008

sXMOS chooses CoSy for Software Defined Silicon

AdvancedIO® Systems Announces Launch of V1021

Xilinx at Embedded World 2008

ARM Leads the Mobile Market Into Console-Quality 3D Gaming


CURRENT FEATURE ARTICLES

HDMI To Go
MIPS Makes Media Mobile (Kevin Morris)
Avoiding the Failure to Communicate
(Bryon Moyer)
ARM Mobilizes Graphics
Mali 2D Standards Buffet (Kevin Morris)
Utilizing Power Management Techniques in Embedded Multicore Devices
by Todd Brian, Mentor Graphics Corporation
Moving Data with VME
(Bryon Moyer)
Working Embedded Networking
by Daryl R. Miller, Lantronix, Inc.

IP - European Style
(Dick Selwood)

JOURNAL WEBCASTS

CHALK TALK Meeting The Challenges of FPGA Design With Synplify Premier - Join Amelia Dalton as she investigates several new design technologies that address the top challenges faced by FPGA designers today. (Synplicity)

CHALK TALK Accelerate SoC and ASIC Verification Using FPGA Prototypes - Join Amelia Dalton as she explores methods of ASIC verification available today and why FPGA-based prototypes offer the most affordable and most powerful solution. (Synplicity)

CHALK TALK Advancing SoC Verification Methods – Join Amelia Dalton as she talks with experts from Mentor Graphics on processor-driven test and other techniques for solving your system-on-chip verification problems. (Mentor Graphics)

CHALK TALK Real World Solutions for FPGAs in Ultra Low Power Applications - Join Amelia Dalton as she examines the Low Power Reference Platform from Arrow, Altera, and Linear Technology - proving that FPGAs really can run on batteries. (Altera, Arrow, Linear)

CHALK TALK Did you miss the ARM Developers' Conference?  Join Amelia Dalton for Journal Webcasts' coverage of the event - it'll be just like you were there! (Journal Webcasts)


HDMI To Go
MIPS Makes Media Mobile (Kevin Morris)

My setup bears the tell-tale tattoos of early-adopter syndrome.  Each signal source plumbed into the cable jungle on the back of the receiver has no fewer than five separate strands – three for component video and two for analog audio.  An S/PDIF might add to the bundle with optional digital audio.  One input source – the homebrew HTPC has a pasta-like plethora of cables coming out of the sound and video cards – some of which run through a special converter box that switches VGA to Component Video.  Fifty expensive component cable-feet away is the now old-school flat-screen monitor.

For those of us who design mobile devices, HDMI is probably best known as the “one cable that replaces that whole mess” in our home A/V systems.  In our mobile-design work life, HDMI hasn’t been coming up that often… yet.  Fast forward a few nm, however, and it’s easy to visualize walking up to my 1080p flat screen, plugging my smartphone in with an HDMI cable, and watching the HD video clip I captured when I spotted Sasquatch strolling through the supermarket parking lot.  For that to happen, however, somebody needs to tackle the problem of putting HDMI capability into our mobile devices – which is exactly what MIPS has just announced.   The company says that about a billion pieces of HDMI equipment should be out there by the year 2010, and MIPS aims to have a piece of that market – particularly the mobile piece.

The MIPS marriage with Chipidea has yielded a sudden stream of differentiating technologies.  MIPS’s IP offering has dominated the digital living room, and the addition of Chipidea has complemented that offering with the analog counterparts in a way that makes the combination much more than the sum of its parts.  More like a product, in fact.  In this case, the product is a 65nm HDMI (High-Definition Multimedia Interface) solution aimed at low-power, portable transmit applications.  MIPS is going after digital still cameras, camcorders, portable media players, game consoles, and – the big one – mobile phones.  They also feel the IP will find a place on the receive end in HDTVs, A/V receivers, and set-top boxes.

Since HDMI is mostly a standard for cables and connectors, the analog/PHY component of HDMI IP is crucial.  The folks who brought us HDMI saw a need for a single cable/connector standard that would replace the expensive and confusing mess that’s hanging out behind my media center with a single, very-high-bandwidth cable.  HDMI is not designed around a particular digital standard.  Instead, HDMI is designed to carry the full, uncompressed video and multi-channel audio resulting from a vast array of compression and transmission standards.  Specifically, HDMI defines electrical and mechanical requirements for cables plus electrical signaling specifications.  Three connectors (types A, B, and C) are defined with either 19 or 29 pins.  Type A is the normal “home style” connector we see most today with 19 pins.  Type B is a higher- resolution version with 29 pins that isn’t often seen yet, and type C is a “mini” connector intended for use with mobile devices. 

The cabling standards for HDMI primarily address the data throughput that can be achieved.  HDMI specifies performance standards that cables must meet, so there is no specific length or materials requirement.  The Category 1 standard supports normal definition or high-definition TV, and Category 2 supports resolutions or bit-rates higher than HDTV (like the increasingly popular high-end 120Hz 1080p).

On the electrical front, the standard specifies a TMDS (Transition-minimized differential signaling) channel that carries the actual audio and video (plus some additional) data.  Video data (which accounts for the majority of the bandwidth, of course) is transmitted first, and audio and auxiliary data are transmitted during the blanking intervals in the video.  The format itself can support video up to 1080p at 120Hz, with audio up to 8 uncompressed channels at up to 192 kHz.  There is also a consumer electronics control (CEC) channel that is designed to carry control information between participating components.

On the home front, chipsets that support HDMI burn lots of power and support lots of channels.  For portable device use, power, price, and footprint are at a premium, so MIPS produced a focused IP offering that meets the foreseeable performance and feature needs of the mobile market without overblowing the solution and missing people’s power budgets.  The MIPS solution includes a PHY (taking advantage of the transceiver expertise of their Chipidea buddies) and a digital controller for both transmit and receive applications. [more]

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