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Loring WirbelAnalyst Loring Wirbel covers programmable logic from an application perspective, providing a sneak peek at the vertical applications that help drive FPGA complexity, performance, and density. The blog will feature videos allowing engineers to spotlight their latest designs, along with news of products and corporate trends at FPGA vendors and the developers of third-party tools for programmable logic.



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Wednesday, August 12, 2009

FMC, from theory to practice

Aug 12 2009 9:50AM | Permalink |Comments (1) |


There’s a funny Laurie Anderson number where she describes an evangelist’s stage show and says, “He described in detail what would happen and then let it take place. It was almost like a prophecy.” I feel that way about FPGA vendors’ support for VITA 57.1, the FPGA Mezzanine Card or FMC. The standard was created, the major FPGA players said they loved it, and now we’re seeing first fruits in an FMC data-conversion card from Curtiss-Wright Embedded Controls.

Curtiss-Wright specifically gave a nod to the Xilinx Virtex-6 in a new family of FMC 8-bit A/D cards, the 3-Gsample/sec ADC512, and the 1.5-Gsample/sec ADC513. The cards do not contain the FPGAs, but enable low-latency access to Virtex-6 FPGAs in the host. As such, they’ll continue the growing trend we’re seeing to utilizing FPGAs in a greater percentage of VME and VPX designs, particularly in mil-aero applications. VITA completes the VITA 57 spec, the FPGA vendors sign on, and the COTS vendors produce cards using the direct FPGA interface. It was almost like a prophecy.

 


Related entries in: Analog | Computers, boards, buses | FPGA Gurus | Programmable Logic | 


Reader Comments



at 8/17/2009 10:52:34 AM, Vmefreak said:
This is called business. Silicon vendors leverage their position in the market via the standards bodies. They push new standards, secure the patents or simply attempt to drive the standard to their strengths, then harvest their efforts. I say Xilinx's effort is brillance. It's no wonder Xilinx's IOB structure is a perfect fit for the FMC spec, while Altera's comes up short. This is seen time and time again in the telecom standards.

Regards,

VF

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