Electronic Products - January 2019

(Alwinus AndrusMCaiU2) #1

IMAGE: RENESAS ELECTRONICS


part, why Alibaba bought chip designer
C-Sky in April.
So far, Google is partnering with
MCU vendors such as Microchip for
devices tied to its IoT cloud offer-
ing. It’s not yet clear whether Google
will make its Edge TPU, announced
in August, a merchant offering for
IoT developers interested in ma-
chine-learning jobs.


  1. ON Semi RSL10
    ON Semiconductor is not one of the first
    names that comes to mind in micro-
    controllers. Nevertheless, its RSL10 — a
    Bluetooth Low Energy chip that targets
    apps such as fitness trackers and smart
    lights — blew away the competition in
    the ULP Mark benchmark with scores of
    1,090 at 3 V and 1,260 at 2.1 V.
    The RSL10 trades low power for
    performance. The chip’s Cortex-M3
    runs at a stately 48 MHz. It’s also
    skimpy on memory, with just 76 KB
    SRAM for program memory, 88 KB for
    data memory, and 384-KB flash. How-
    ever, it does pack a 32-bit DSP core to
    run audio codecs.

  2. ETA Compute Tensai
    Startup ETA Compute debuted in August
    2017 as a core vendor with a unique
    technology for ultra-low-power chips. It
    described an Arm Cortex-M3 doing use-
    ful work while consuming 5 μW based
    on an asynchronous technique using
    a novel handshake to wake up circuits
    resting at power levels below 0.3 mV.
    The company could not resist the in-
    tense gravity pulling silicon startups into
    AI at the edge. In October, it announced
    that its Tensai inference accelerator can
    run CFAR-10 jobs at just 2 mW, edging
    out the GAP8 chip from startup Green-
    waves that burns as little as 3.7 mW.
    Tensai pairs ETA’s Cortex-M3 with a
    CoolFlux DSP16 core licensed from NXP
    to run convolutional and spiking neural
    networks. The chip should be in produc-
    tion early next year.

  3. Microchip SAM R34/35
    Hoping to ride the LoRa wave, Micro-
    chip Technology launched its SAM
    R34/35 in the fall, marrying one of its


microcontrollers with a LoRa transceiver
in a sub-$5 system-in-package. Micro-
chip is the latest of the top MCU vendors
to jump on the LoRa bandwagon. In late
2015, STMicroelectronics announced
its support and, more recently, shipped
board-level products for LoRa.
The SAM R34/35 aims more at low
cost and low power than high perfor-
mance. Its Cortex-M0+ processor tops
out at 48 MHz, although it delivers a
CoreMark/MHz score of 2.46. And the
chip supports, at most, 256-KB flash and
40-KB SRAM. Interestingly, the radio

handles three bands — 137–175 MHz,
410–525 MHz, and the more typically
used 862–1,020 MHz.


  1. NXP i.MX-RT600
    The race to bring machine learning to the
    edge of the IoT is already getting crowd-
    ed, but a handful of options stands out.
    NXP Semiconductors’ planned i.MX-
    RT600 stakes out a high-performance
    position for audio apps.
    The chip, not yet in production, in-
    cludes a 600-MHz Tensilica HiFi 4 DSP
    that can deliver eight 16 × 16 MACs per


The DRP is an optional part of the Renesas RZ/A2M key for targeting neural-net jobs.

10 Hot Processors for IoT PRODUCT SPOTLIGHT 25


ELECTRONIC PRODUCTS • electronicproducts.com • JANUARY 2019
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