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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.
Supports USB HUB function (2HOST or 1HOST+4 Device) 8581E 28 nm HPC+ 8 LPDDR3, LPDDR4/4X A7862E 12 nm 8 LPDDR3, LPDDR4/4X Bluetooth 5 BLE GPS + Beidou + Glonass / GPS + Galileo + Glonass 3× SDIO 3.0 / USB 2.0 Type-C, USB 1.1 and OTG 2.0 / 4× SPI / 4× I2S / 8× I2C / 7× UART 150 GPIO V8811 22 nm 1 Integrated 16 Mb/32M Flash
The category of digital signal processors includes all types and makes of signal processing microprocessors. Subcategories This category has only the following subcategory.
A sensor hub is a microcontroller unit/coprocessor/DSP set that helps to integrate data from different sensors and process them. [1] This technology can help off-load these jobs from a product's main central processing unit, thus saving battery consumption [2] and providing a performance improvement. [3] Intel has the Intel Integrated Sensor Hub.
dual C66x DSP up to 750 MHz quad ARM Cortex-M4s for image processing and general purpose up to 212 MHz Up to 10500 dual SGX544: DDR3/DDR3L: RISC OS, Linux, TI-RTOS, Android, WinCE: 10/100/1000 Mbit/s Ethernet Switch w/2 Ports, 4xPRU-ICSS (100 Mbps Ethernet) [9] multiple Video Input Ports (parallel or CSI), USB 3.0, PCIe, SATA, and Secure Boot
The HP Chromebook 14 was announced September 11, 2013 [159] with an Intel Haswell Celeron processor, USB 3.0 ports, and 4G broadband. An updated version of the Chromebook lineup was announced on September 3, 2014.
The first TriMedia was created in 1987 under the name LIFE-1 VLIW processor by Gerrit Slavenburg and Junien Labrousse. For the next several years LIFE was further matured internally in Philips under guidance of Gerrit Slavenburg, which resulted in 1996 in the introduction of the first Trimedia product: the TM1000 PCI Media Processor (introduced as TM-1 [1]).
The port of Linux for Hexagon runs under a hypervisor layer ("Hexagon Virtual Machine" [25]) and was merged with the 3.2 release of the kernel. [ 26 ] [ 27 ] The original hypervisor is closed-source, and in April 2013 a minimal open-source hypervisor implementation for QDSP6 V2 and V3, the "Hexagon MiniVM" was released by Qualcomm under a BSD ...