New ARM powered Freescale MCU sets modern example


While this is not a PowerPC chip; it is a RISC chip, and sets a perfect example for the modern predominant path of most RISC chips.  For those that don't know, an MCU (Micro-Controller Unit) is a type of SoC (System-on-Chip); which means it has the CPU, RAM and ROM on-chip to run embedded applications.  These are typically used in jets, cars, power generators and many other industrial based applications.

There are also PowerPC specific MCU development options like this that have been around for a while, and put all the capability directly in the users hands.  Much like Unix and Linux in the software realm; these SoC hardware and embedded development tools are only limited by the ability and imagination of the user.

This is why we should embrace the fact that we are no longer computing within the mainstream (and never really were); because even the current path of RISC steers far away from user friendly.

Solutions like these can literally turn engineering dreams into reality. 

2 comments:

  1. From data I have seen the ARM chips are some of the smallest and most efficient CPU. These ARM MCU you mention fit inside a golf ball dimple. I'm not sure of the wattage consumption. It would be in the very low single digits.

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    1. They are certainly small, yes.

      As for power consumption... I'm sure it's actually under 1 watt when idle, and no more than 2-3 at full utilization; if that.

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