Intelliga Integrated Design, a UK design house develops LIN core for Xilinx
December 17th 2003 - Essex design house Intelliga Integrated Design has developed a Local Interconnect Network (LIN) core for Xilinx's Spartan, Virtex and CoolRunner FPGAs.
The firm said the core takes up just three per cent of a million gate Spartan3, a device that will cost $12 in volume next year, according to Xilinx. "
We've also been doing a lot of work to fit it into CoolRunner, taking up about half of the larger ones," said Steve Ede, marketing director at Intelliga.
LIN is increasingly used in automotive for non-critical systems, such as electric mirrors, seat adjustment, doors, sunroofs and air conditioning. "Xilinx is very keen to get its silicon into automotive," Ede said.
Intelliga's LIN core is a standalone design, comprising MAC and PHY functions with an interface to transceiver chips, such as Philips' TJA1020.
A development kit is available, as is a kit for a CAN-bus interface that works in Virtex and Spartan FPGAs.
Intelliga started out as a design house in the mid-90s. "We branched out into IP about three years ago," said Ede.
Based in Saffron Walden, the firm employs six people, and has plans to expand next year, perhaps with some external funding.
The firm said the core takes up just three per cent of a million gate Spartan3, a device that will cost $12 in volume next year, according to Xilinx. "
We've also been doing a lot of work to fit it into CoolRunner, taking up about half of the larger ones," said Steve Ede, marketing director at Intelliga.
LIN is increasingly used in automotive for non-critical systems, such as electric mirrors, seat adjustment, doors, sunroofs and air conditioning. "Xilinx is very keen to get its silicon into automotive," Ede said.
Intelliga's LIN core is a standalone design, comprising MAC and PHY functions with an interface to transceiver chips, such as Philips' TJA1020.
A development kit is available, as is a kit for a CAN-bus interface that works in Virtex and Spartan FPGAs.
Intelliga started out as a design house in the mid-90s. "We branched out into IP about three years ago," said Ede.
Based in Saffron Walden, the firm employs six people, and has plans to expand next year, perhaps with some external funding.
Related Semiconductor IP
- Ultra Ethernet MAC & PCS 100G/200G/400G/800G
- Ethernet PCS 100G/200G/400G/800G/1.6T
- Ethernet MAC 100G/200G/400G/800G/1.6T
- Junction Over-Temperature Detector with Linear Centigrade-to-Voltage Output - X-FAB XT018
- Performance P570 Gen 3
Related News
- DCD-SEMI Joins MIPI Alliance and Unveils Latest I3C IP at MIPI Plugfest Warsaw 2025
- DCD-SEMI Brings Full ASIL-D Functional Safety to Entire Automotive IP Cores Portfolio
- Kerala Positions Design and IP at Core of Chip Strategy
- DCD-SEMI Unveils Ultra-Fast DAES IP Core for AES Encryption
Latest News
- SkyeChip Berhad Delivers 35.0% Net Profit Growth Ahead of Main Market Debut on 20 May 2026
- Quantum eMotion and JMEM TEK Sign Consortium Agreement to Accelerate Quantum-Resilient Semiconductor SoC Development
- Silvaco Announces Immediate Availability of Mixel MIPI C-PHY/D-PHY Combo IP on TSMC N2P Process
- BrainChip Strikes IP Licensing Deal with ASICLAND
- Arteris Technology Adopted by Li Auto for Intelligent Vehicles