What next for microcontrollers?
Viewing the migration from 8- and 16-bit to 32-bit MCUs from the perspective of the ARM architecture
By Joseph Yiu, ARM
Embedded.com (01/05/10, 09:41:00 AM EST)
The embedded world is constantly changing. You might not have noticed, but if you take a minute to recall what a microcontroller system was like 10 years ago and compare it to today's latest microcontroller systems, you will find that PCB design, component packages, level of integration, clock speed, and memory size have all going through several generations of change.
One of the hottest topics in this area is when will the last of remaining 8-bit microcontroller users start to move away from legacy architectures and move to modern 32-bit processor architectures like the ARM Cortex-M based microcontroller family.
Over the last few years there has been a strong momentum of embedded developers starting the migration to 32-bit microcontrollers and, in this multi-part article, we will take a look at some of the factors accelerating this migration.
In the first part of this article we will summarize as to why embedded developers should consider moving to the 32-bit microcontrollers.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- RVA23, Multi-cluster, Hypervisor and Android
- 64 bit RISC-V Multicore Processor with 2048-bit VLEN and AMM
- NPU IP Core for Mobile
- RISC-V AI Acceleration Platform - Scalable, standards-aligned soft chiplet IP
- H.264 Decoder
Related White Papers
- Criteria for ARM Migration as the Industry Standard MCU
- Microcontroller Applications -> 'Internetworking' treads on MCU turf
- Microcontroller Applications -> Connectivity invigorates MCU designs
- Microcontroller Applications -> Software vital in Net-linked MCU apps
Latest White Papers
- QiMeng: Fully Automated Hardware and Software Design for Processor Chip
- RISC-V source class riscv_asm_program_gen, the brain behind assembly instruction generator
- Concealable physical unclonable functions using vertical NAND flash memory
- Ramping Up Open-Source RISC-V Cores: Assessing the Energy Efficiency of Superscalar, Out-of-Order Execution
- Transition Fixes in 3nm Multi-Voltage SoC Design