On Sunday, March 11, 2012 6:00:50 AM UTC-7, emmanuel wrote:
> On 11 mar, 12:33, rickman <
gnu...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > On Mar 11, 5:10 am, Rafael Deliano <
Rafael_Deli...@arcor.de> wrote:
>
> >
>
> > > > What would you like to see on a GA144 application board?
>
> >
>
> > > For an "evaluation board" ( something stuffed with lots of
>
> > > components ) most people will stick with the EVB001 from
>
> > > Green Arrays. Its well done. Maybe a bit expensive, but
>
> > > people that are serious about GA144 will not have much
>
> > > problem with that.
>
> >
>
> > I don't see where the EVB001 is very good for anything other than
>
> > playing with the CPU. Maybe the name "evaluation" board is not so
>
> > important. I wouldn't spend $500 just to "evaluate" or learn about
>
> > the chip. I might spend that much on a board that lets me evaluate
>
> > the device for my application. Would you call that an "application"
>
> > board? But the EVB001 doesn't have the facility of adding any useful
>
> > interfaces really. I just can't see a chip like this being useful in
>
> > enough apps unless you can hang some useful interfaces off it, like
>
> > high speed USB and at least 100 Mbps Ethernet. I am thinking wireless
>
> > may well be important too. I don't know as much about that. I also
>
> > don't see anything coming out of GreenArrays along these lines. Just
>
> > like they published half an app note on adding a crystal to make an
>
> > oscillator they published half an app note on adding 10 Mbps Ethernet
>
> > by bit banging. Actually I would only call it 10% of an app note as
>
> > there is a ton more work to be done before Ethernet could be supported
>
> > in a useful way.
>
> >
>
> > I'm hoping that if I put out a GA144 board with a RMII PHY that might
>
> > spur some interest in developing the remainder of the design. I'm not
>
> > as encouraged that high speed USB will be practical without adding a
>
> > full USB stack on another chip.
>
> >
>
> > > For an "adapter board" ( a simple board that enables
>
> > > breadboarding ) there is not much available yet.
>
> > > Most people will not take the SchmartBoard 202-0048-02
>
> > > seriously.
>
> > > The adapter board would typically
>
> > > * fit in a PGA socket. One would have a look which of
>
> > > these obsolete sockets is best available.
>
> > > * come assembled, tested with ICs, capacitors.
>
> > > * there would be two variants:
>
> > > a) with serial boot-memory
>
> > > b) with serial boot-memory and parallel SRAM
>
> > > in BGA48
>
> > > Version a) is for simple "gate array application"
>
> > > with no virtual machine. One would not want to lose
>
> > > the pins that are gone with SRAM in version b).
>
> >
>
> > How would you make use of an adapter board? I don't see this as being
>
> > a very big seller and I believe it would be VERY expensive to make. I
>
> > think people would just roll their own boards before paying a huge
>
> > price for such obsolete technology.
>
> >
>
> > You don't really loose many pins by hooking up RAM exactly. The RAM
>
> > example uses a single node with 4 I/Os and the two 18 bit I/O ports.
>
> > Yes you can use the 18 bit ports as I/O, but you can't use them in the
>
> > same way as the individual port bits. On each port all 18 bits are
>
> > input or all are output and when you write to one bit you have to
>
> > write to all. Otherwise there are only 21 bits of individual I/O.
>
> > You do loose 4 of those for the memory control lines.
>
> >
>
> > BTW, in what apps do you see the GA144 being used as a "simple gate
>
> > array"?
>
> >
>
> > > That a third category "application board" exists i
>
> > > am sceptical. As every one will have a different
>
> > > application in mind.
>
> > > For low speed one can breadboard with the adapter boards.
>
> > > For high speed applications one will have to layout.
>
> >
>
> > What high speed apps? Other than the memory interface and the GA144
>
> > to GA144 SERDES, what would be high speed on this chip? Even the
>
> > memory interface only runs at 5 MHz according to their app note. I
>
> > suppose you could bit bang a SERDES at very reduced speeds compared to
>
> > the hard core, but that wouldn't be hard to layout. I think any of
>
> > these boards needs to address a user's application if it is going to
>
> > be worth the price. Like I said, that is my issue with the EVB001.
>
> >
>
> > The part of "every one will have a different application in mind" that
>
> > is a bit funny is that so far, I haven't heard anyone suggest
>
> > realistic apps for the part, much less everyone having "different
>
> > apps". I'm not saying they don't exist. I'm saying no one seems to
>
> > be talking about them. That's what I am looking for. What would
>
> > people find interesting to use this device for? An eval/demo/app
>
> > board can be a superset of what any one user wants. In fact I am
>
> > pretty confident that is the only way to make it useful.
>
> >
>
> > Rick
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Hello,
>
>
>
> I wouldn't spend $500 just to "evaluate" or learn about the chip. If
>
> you want a board , please visit my web page :
>
>
>
>
http://esaid.free.fr/
>
>
>
>
http://esaid.free.fr/tutoriel_arrayforth/Ga144_pcb/Ga144_kit.html
>
>
>
> I made this GA144 board and it is cheaper.
>
>
>
> Emmanuel
Emmanuel, are you offering these boards for sale?