On 20/05/12 18:23, dp wrote:
> On May 20, 3:13 pm, Nick Leverton<
n...@leverton.org> wrote:
>> ... I just popped in here, I'm actually looking for Linux
>> PowerPC material but at a less intense level than the linux-ppc kernel
>> development list ! c.o.l.e and c.o.l.ppc are almost dead in comparison.
>> A well known search engine suggests PPC does come up here once every
>> few years ...
>
> Not many use it here indeed - and even fewer would ask a PPC specific
> question here, I believe.
> But it is not that unlikely to get something, I use PPC (not linux
> though), David does I believe and there must be someone else I just
> can't think of now. So it is not that pointless.
>
> I see a lot of linux specific questions (mostly beginners type)
> in the Freescale forum - but I read only rarely the new posts
> of the PPC relevant part which I get emailed. It may be
> a good resource for you, certainly worth a try.
>
> Dimiter
>
I don't know if I'm the "David" you are referring to - there are quite a
few people by that name - but I use PPC-based microcontrollers from
Freescale. I don't use them with Linux, however. (Freescale does make
PPC microcontrollers suitable for Linux, especially for networking
applications, but I haven't used those.)
You are right that PPC questions don't come up much here - PPC-based
microcontrollers are quite high-end, and fairly specialised devices.
Most of the development using them is done by large companies, and they
are often quite secretive (automotive or military types). c.a.e.
appeals more to amateurs, hobby developers, and small companies, few of
which have the time and resources to use such big devices. There is a
certain proportion of c.a.e. followers who are involved in such high-end
development systems, and who hang out here as somewhere to teach, to
learn, and to spread ideas about what interests them - but there's a
fair chance that even if they use these devices, they won't talk about
them much here.
However, I do believe that Freescale is aiming to spread these sorts of
devices to a wider range of users. The "PX" series is not for the
automotive market (though some of the chips are identical to existing
automotive ones, other than the qualification and testing processes).
And ironically, given this thread's original topic, the PPC-based
microcontrollers are one of the few devices types that really does have
second-sources. ST Micro make a number of PPC microcontrollers under an
agreement with Freescale, and though it is hard to figure out due to
different numbering, I believe some of these should match up exactly
with Freescale devices.