MIPS Architecture Enabling Growing List of Mobile Application
Processors
Sony𠏋 PlayStation® Portable
Among the Battery-Powered Products Leveraging the MIPS® Architecture
to Heighten the User Experience MOUNTAIN VIEW,
Calif., August 30, 2004 - The Sony PlayStation® Portable and
Canon's EOS Digital Rebel camera family are among the growing list
of portable devices being driven by MIPS-Based?application
processors. MIPS Technologies, Inc. (Nasdaq: MIPS), a Silicon
Valley-based company whose technology is found in many high-growth
consumer electronics products, announced today that the
industry-standard MIPS® microprocessor architecture is extending its
reach into the mobile applications space. The architecture's
inherent low-power and high-performance capabilities have already
made it the de facto standard in consumer products such as digital
set-top boxes, digital TVs and DVD recorders.
Growing requirements for audio, video and other digital signal
processing (DSP) tasks are increasing the performance demands on
applications processors inside many mobile products. This trend is
causing OEMs to reconsider their system and hardware configurations
- and therefore the microprocessor architecture upon which the
system relies - to maximize performance capabilities while
prolonging battery life.
Below is a partial listing of MIPS-Based mobile devices available
to consumers. For more design wins, visit the company's Web site at
www.mips.com.
"We chose the MIPS architecture for our digital camera processor
because the technology enables our team to design products that
maximize overall system performance while minimizing any impact to
battery life," said Coby Sella, vice president and general manager
of Zoran's mobile division. "The power savings is achieved in the
design of our COACH processor and in the system architecture we
deliver to the digital camera manufacturers. The success of the
design has been proven by Zoran's growing market share of the
overall digital camera market."
"For a growing list of
customers, the MIPS architecture is the choice for a range of mobile
applications because it uses low power to deliver the right
performance at the right price point," said Russ Bell, vice
president of marketing at MIPS Technologies. "We achieve this unique
offering by leveraging standard off-the-shelf memories, libraries
and EDA flows from industry leading vendors. Moving forward, MIPS
Technologies will continue to deliver optimized products that meet
the power and performance demands of high-growth embedded
markets."
Why MIPS for Mobile Application Processors The MIPS
architecture offers low power advantages that are key to SOC
designers targeting battery-powered devices. At the heart of the
MIPS architecture is a streamlined architecture that has met the
demands of generations of applications over a 20-year period. The
MIPS instruction set offers 32-element register files (not 16, as
with other architectures), which reduce the need to access embedded
cache and main memory to retrieve data. Fewer clock cycles are
needed to perform most tasks allowing the system to run at lower
frequencies. These characteristics translate into lower core and
system power consumption while operating at maximum microprocessor
performance.
MIPS Technologies' customers may gain design flexibility through
access to ISA licenses, optimized hard macros and synthesizable
cores, which enable the optimization of silicon die area and power
configurations to maximize battery life. Additionally, MIPS
Technologies' line of the industry's highest performing cores offer
customers more system headroom, so future upgrades can be
implemented in software easily and quickly.
MIPS-Based Cores More Power Efficient Below is a
comparison of MIPS Technologies cores to similar products from ARM
Holdings plc. The MIPS-Based cores were developed using standard
off-the-shelf libraries and memories and without voltage scaling
techniques. All numbers were taken from public material on the
companies' Web sites as of this announcement's date, and all
products are listed as core-only configurations.
|
MIPS32® 4KEc?core1 |
ARM 926EJ-S core1 |
Best Frequency: |
233 MHz |
250 MHz |
Best Performance: |
356 DMIPS |
300 DMIPS |
Power: |
0.25 mW/MHz |
0.35 mW/MHz |
Area: |
1.7 mm2 |
2.2 mm2 |
Power Efficiency: |
0.16 mW/DMIPS |
0.29 mW/DMIPS |
|
MIPS32 24Kc?core1 |
ARM 1136J-S core1
|
Best Frequency: |
400 MHz |
333 MHz |
Best Performance: |
576 DMIPS |
400 DMIPS |
Power: |
0.58 mW/MHz |
0.6 mW/MHz |
Area: |
2.8 mm2 |
4.5mm2 |
Power Efficiency: |
0.40 mW/DMIPS |
0.50 mW/DMIPS |
Shipping MIPS-Based Mobile Devices The MIPS
architecture is gaining key design wins in a range of
battery-operated devices. OEMs shipping mobile MIPS-Based products
include Canon, Casio, Fujifilm, Fujitsu, JVC, Minolta, PENTAX,
Philips, Samsung and Sony. MIPS Technologies licensees providing
innovative and low-power MIPS-Based silicon include AMD, Broadcom,
LSI Logic, NEC, Philips Semiconductors, Sunplus, Thrane and Thrane,
Toshiba and Zoran.
MIPS-Based mobile devices currently shipping or announced
include:
Entertainment
- Sony PlayStation Portable handheld video game
- Sony AIBO entertainment robot
- Sony QRIO "dream robot"
- Macsense HomePod wireless audio player
Cameras
- Canon EOS 10D and Digital Rebel digital SLR cameras
- Canon Optura 300 digital video camcorder
- Fujifilm FinePix F700, S5000 and S7000 digital still
cameras
- JVC GR-HD1 high-definition digital video camera
- Samsung Digimax 370 and 430 digital cameras
Computing/Communications
- AMX Modero ViewPoint MVP-7500 and MVP-8400 wireless
touch-screen panels
- Fujitsu TeamPad handheld computer
- Itronix fex21 handheld computer
- Wireless PC tablet in use by Chinese educational institutions
_________________________________ 1. Worst case
conditions: 1.08V, 125C, slow silicon
About MIPS
Technologies MIPS Technologies, Inc. is a leading provider of
industry-standard processor architectures and cores for digital
consumer and business applications. The company drives the broadest
architectural alliance that is delivering 32- and 64-bit embedded
RISC solutions. The company licenses its intellectual property to
semiconductor companies, ASIC developers and system OEMs. MIPS
Technologies and its licensees offer the widest range of robust,
scalable processors in standard, custom, semi-custom and
application-specific products. The company is based in Mountain
View, Calif., and can be reached at +1 (650) 567-5000 or http://www.us.design-reuse.com/exit?url=http://www.mips.com.
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Contact MIPS Technologies, Inc.
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