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A digital signal processor (DSP) is a specialized microprocessor chip, with its architecture optimized for the operational needs of digital signal processing. [ 1 ] : 104–107 [ 2 ] DSPs are fabricated on metal–oxide–semiconductor (MOS) integrated circuit chips.
Arm Holdings (through acquisition of Falanx and Logipard); CEVA, Inc. Chips&Media Specializes in video codecs, image signal processing, and deep learning-based computer vision system (super-resolution).
DSP HDL Toolbox - Design digital signal processing applications for FPGAs, ASICs, and SoCs; HDL Coder - Generate Verilog, SystemVerilog, and VHDL code for FPGA and ASIC designs; HDL Verifier - Test and verify Verilog and VHDL using HDL simulators and FPGA boards
Digital signal processing (DSP) is the use of digital processing, such as by computers or more specialized digital signal processors, to perform a wide variety of signal processing operations. The digital signals processed in this manner are a sequence of numbers that represent samples of a continuous variable in a domain such as time, space ...
According to 2012 estimation, Qualcomm shipped 1.2 billion DSP cores inside its system on a chip (SoCs) (average 2.3 DSP core per SoC) in 2011, and 1.5 billion cores were planned for 2012, making the QDSP6 the most shipped architecture of DSP [12] (CEVA had around 1 billion of DSP cores shipped in 2011 with 90% of IP-licensable DSP market [13]).
The Super Harvard Architecture Single-Chip Computer (SHARC) is a high performance floating-point and fixed-point DSP from Analog Devices. SHARC is used in a variety of signal processing applications ranging from audio processing, to single-CPU guided artillery shells to 1000-CPU over-the-horizon radar processing computers. The original design ...
Ceva Inc. was created in November 2002, through the combination of the DSP IP licensing division of DSP Group (based in Israel) and Parthus Technologies plc.. Parthus was originally named Silicon Systems Ltd, and founded in Dublin, Ireland, in 1993 by Brian Long and Peter McManamon, Parthus had its initial public offering in 2000, just as the dot-com bubble was bursting in May, 2000.
Blackfin is a family of 16-/32-bit microprocessors developed, manufactured and marketed by Analog Devices.The processors have built-in, fixed-point digital signal processor (DSP) functionality performed by 16-bit multiply–accumulates (MACs), accompanied on-chip by a microcontroller. [1]