2013-08-25 12:51 PM
Looks like 168MHz Cortex-M4 was announced two years ago. Have ST announced any faster controllers/discovery boards since?
2013-08-25 01:17 PM
They have a geometry shrink on the table.
http://www.st.com/web/catalog/mmc/FM141/SC1169/SS1577/LN1806
2MB of FLASH, and 180 MHz But, honestly if you want speed there are routes that get you there, and the M3/M4 aren't it. You need something with fast, and native SDRAM, DDRx access, and caching architectures which the the Cortex-Mx parts don't address. The FPU only supports 32-bit floats, there's no MMU, and a restrictive memory map.http://www.st.com/web/catalog/mmc/FM169/SC1156
For cheap and fast processors look at what's being used in phones and tablets, a lot of that business has migrated to China, and the parts have a very short life-cycle.2013-08-25 05:03 PM
2013-08-25 05:47 PM
Maybe it would be helpful to be specific about what you're doing, the kind of horse power you think you need, and what kind of frequency/bandwidth the processor/memory need to provide.
2013-08-26 11:43 AM
Of course nothing there I'd ever be able to solder to a PCB.
2013-08-27 05:20 AM
Of course nothing there I'd ever be able to solder to a PCB.
yes, of course, if the package were such that you were ''ever be able to solder to a PCB'' you would get reflections of a magnitude that would kill the operation instantly. ''a wire is NOT a wire'' Erik2013-08-27 05:27 AM
Of course nothing there I'd ever be able to solder to a PCB.
yes, of course, if the package were such that you were ''ever be able to solder to a PCB'' you would get reflections of a magnitude that would kill the operation instantly. ''a wire is NOT a wire'' Erik2013-08-27 08:44 AM
The high frequencies involved are inside the chip. Running the current 168 MHz parts hand-soldered LQFPs is no problem.
2013-08-27 01:16 PM
<i>The high frequencies involved are inside the chip. Running the current 168 MHz parts hand-soldered LQFPs is no problem.</i>
re reflections etc who gives a hoot about the frequency, it is the associated rise and fall times <b>that do not change by using a lower frequency</b> that causes the reflections. Erik