Controller Chip Targets Automation Market
Controller Chip Targets Automation Market
That statement “does sound a little bit like marketing hyperbole,” observes Jim Turley, a microprocessor analyst based in Pacific Grove, Calif. “But in this case, I think there’s a lot of truth in that. [The fido chip] is a very interesting device that combines some old, familiar features with some new and pretty innovative features,” allows Turley, who is the owner and principal analyst for Silicon Insider, a newsletter covering microprocessors and semiconductor technology.
Hardware contexts
According to Prettyjohns, Innovasic’s decision to incorporate context management in hardware on the fido chip will save significant time and effort for industrial embedded systems designers. In embedded systems, the management of “contexts,” or tasks, that must be performed reliably, such as time-critical or safety-critical functions, is usually done in software. This requires a great deal of software testing to make sure that the system is fail-safe, and even then, according to Prettyjohns, errors can occur.
“There could be a problem where a piece of memory gets overwritten and that could completely corrupt another task,” Prettyjohns says. But in the fido, five space- and time-partitioned “hardware contexts” are integrated in silicon on the chip. This eliminates much of the need for extensive software testing, he says. “And with the fido, the chip itself has no ability to write over the memory of one task from another one,” says Prettyjohns, meaning that critical tasks can’t be corrupted.
Also key for industrial users is the fido chip’s four on-chip UICs, which the company describes as programmable peripheral engines. By loading in one of various standard libraries, the UIC can be programmed to provide any of various interfaces, including UART, GPIO, 10/100 Ethernet, CAN, I2C or SPI, the company says. This means that users need stock only one chip to serve many applications, says Prettyjohns. This is in contrast to most general purpose microcontroller families, which require separate part numbers for each I/O configuration needed.
Long life
Other fido features include a debugging environment designed with industrial users in mind that relies on hardware features built into the chip to greatly simplify debug and reduce time to market.
In addition, given that Innovasic has built its reputation by providing solutions for obsolescence problems, the company is particularly aware of that issue, Prettyjohns points out. “Because customers will be buying from Innovasic, we can assure them that we’re not going to discontinue the product during their product lifecycles,” he pledges. “We’re going to have this product around for a good many years.”
Innovasic Semiconductor Inc.
www.innovasic.com
Jim Turley’s Silicon Insider
www.jimturley.com








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