[TechView: Digital]
Save Cold Cash On ColdFire
Daniel Harris
ED Online ID #18082
February 14, 2008
Copyright © 2006 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved. Printing of this document is for personal use only.
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ColdFire MCUs have been part of Freescale’s
68K family since 1994. Because
of their popularity, the company has
decided to make the 32-bit V1 ColdFire
core available to the embedded community
through IPextreme, an IP licensing
company. Yet the ever-competitive MCU
core market has prompted IPextreme to
offer V1 ColdFire for as low as $10,000.
“By offering the V1 ColdFire core to
developers at the $10K threshold, Freescale
and IPextreme are providing an
exceptionally cost-effective entry point
to ColdFire architecture,” said Aiden
Mitchell, consumer and industrial MCU
product manager for Freescale’s Microcontroller
Solutions Group. “IPextreme’s
innovative online Core Store gives customers
the design freedom and flexibility
to develop application-specific solutions
without the high cost and long sales cycle
usually associated with traditional core
technology transactions.”
The V1 ColdFire, a simplified version
of the V2, was designed for entry-level
32-bit applications while requiring a
marginal footprint. The V1 was also
engineered to consume the lowest power
of any ColdFire products to date. However,
it can deliver around 10 times the
performance of 8-bit MCUs. And for
designers who don’t require performance
enhancers to give them an edge, the multiply-
accumulate (MAC) and enhanced
MAC divide functions are optional,
which helps keeps costs down.
The RISC-based V1 architecture
includes a two-stage instruction fetch
pipeline and a
two-stage operand
execution pipeline (see the figure). The core provides an
entry-level solution with an upwardcompatible
path to higher-performance
ColdFire cores.
“Offering a single-use license of the
V1 ColdFire core at a $10,000 price
point will create significant disruption
and expand design opportunities in the
entry-level 32-bit embedded marketplace,”
said Warren Savage, president and
CEO of IPextreme. “We are excited to
join forces with Freescale in this industry-
changing licensing initiative.”
So for your next 32-bit ASIC design,
you can plop down a V1 core among
your proprietary IP blocks and leverage
the third-party tools and software ecosystem
built around the ColdFire MCU
family. When you find yourself in need of
more blocks, IPextreme will soon open
the virtual doors of its online Core Store.
“IPextreme seems to serve as a virtual
shopping mall for Freescale cores,”
said Tom Starnes, processor analyst at
Objective Analysis. “The ColdFire core
architecture has a rich history and a huge
following, so it’s good to see it available
to customers wanting to add the architecture
to their ASIC designs at an outrageously
low cost.”
Another way Freescale is simplifying
designs is by providing a standard product
platform (SPP) that’s compatible
with the V1 core. The SPP is a collection
of silicon-tested peripheral IP that can
be added to save time when engineering
your ASIC.
The V1 ColdFire should be available
for licensing by the end of this quarter
from IPextreme through its online Core
Store. V1 ColdFire core licensing fees
start at $10,000 for a basic single-use
license.
IPextreme • www.ip-extreme.com/corestore
Freescale • www.freescale.com
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