Chip Express deal yields free ARM cores
Chip Express deal yields free ARM cores
By Chris Edwards, EE Times
November 13, 2002 (4:40 p.m. EST)
URL: http://www.eetimes.com/story/OEG20021113S0019
Munich, Germany - Suppliers of semiconductor intellectual property (IP) cores will be able to get free access to one of ARM Holdings' processor cores so that they can demonstrate their designs in silicon through a deal cut by gate-array vendor Chip Express and ARM. IP vendors will be able to get up to 140 gate arrays with an ARM7 core on-chip through Chip Express to act as prototyping and test platforms. Doug Bailey, vice-president of marketing for Chip Express, said: “ARM is donating the microprocessor and Amba [on-chip system] bus for free to allow low-cost verification of IP and prove that it works with Amba. “The benefit for ARM is that it will mean more people using the Amba bus. It helps establish Amba as a de facto standard. At the same time, we get to grow our relationship with the IP companies. Plus, better tested IP will help the IP industry.”Over the last year, IP companies have said they need to demonstrate working IP in silicon to encourage customers to sign licences, which adds to the expense of developing commercial IP. Bailey said that, although programmes such as TSMC's Silicon Shuttle can provide comparatively cheap access to small volumes of test chips, it means they have to employ customer-owned tooling design methods or use third-party standard-cell layout service providers. “Most IP guys don't want to do layout,” said Bailey. Chip Express will take the design at the gate-level netlist stage and produce the wafer needed to provide the 140 chips for a flat fee of $50 000. “There are some restrictions. This is only available when we have the resources available. If we have a million dollar project going through, that will take precedence. There are restrictions on the package options and you cannot sell the chips for profit. And if you want 141 chips, you will need to buy an ARM licence,” said Bailey. So far, the only core that can be used in these IP test-chip projects is the synthesisable version of the ARM7TDMI. “We have access to the ARM9 [as a licensee] but not in this programme. We are still talking to ARM about that,” said Bailey.
Related Semiconductor IP
- DDR5 MRDIMM PHY and Controller
- RVA23, Multi-cluster, Hypervisor and Android
- HBM4E PHY and controller
- 64 bit RISC-V Multicore Processor with 2048-bit VLEN and AMM
- NPU IP Core for Mobile
Related News
- Controversial former Arm China CEO founds RISC-V chip startup
- Fifth generation ARM Cortex-X for 3nm AI chip designs
- Minima qualifies to join Arm Flexible Access Program to bring the Minima Chip to Life
- ARM signs Meta as first chip product customer, says report
Latest News
- Primemas Announces Customer Samples Milestone of World’s First CXL 3.0 SoC
- BrainChip and HaiLa Partner to Demonstrate Ultra-Low Power Edge AI Connectivity for IoT Sensor Applications
- Creonic's DVB-S2X/S2 IP Cores Now Support the New DVB-NIP Standard
- Ceva Launches MotionEngine™ Hex: Bringing Precise, Touch-Free, Spatial Control to Smart TV, Gaming, and IoT Interfaces
- SEALSQ, ColibriTD, and Xdigit Announce Plan to Develop a Breakthrough Quantum Computing Based Solution Set to Revolutionize Semiconductor Wafer Yields for Sub-7nm Nodes