Projects
Articles
Interests
Design Flow
Technology
Authored Comments
Subject | Comment | Link to Comment |
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Aspen: Accelerator for Extended Reality Perception |
Hi, Thank you for submitting this project it looks very interesting. I noticed in your IEEE paper that the M3 had 32Kb Data and Instruction caches. There were also two DMA engines? and 4 additional 32 Kb SRAM blocks. There was no description of these in the paper. Which DMA engines did you use, were these Arm IP? We use both the DMA PL230 and DMA 350 Arm IP in the nanoSoC reference design. We look forward to hearing from you. John. |
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Welcome to SoC Labs |
Welcome, I see you have linked to quite a number of interests and design flow stages. Happy to help find ways to collaborate within SoC Labs. We can arrange a Teams call if that would help. We look forward to hearing from you. John. |
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Making progress |
We would be happy to hear how you are getting on with your work on the project. If you are finding the information you need on the SoC Labs site. If there is anything you are still not sure about please let us know. John. |
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Teams Call |
How about Monday or Tuesday next week. Afternoons are better for us. John. |
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Welcome to SoC Labs |
Welcome to SoC Labs, It would be great if you could share a few of your interests with us so we can better understand how we can collaborate. We look forward to hearing from you. John. |
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Welcome to SoC Labs |
Sorry for the delay in making contact with you. It would be good to understand a little about your interests in SoC design and then we can help work out how a collaboration might work. We look forward to hearing from you. John. |
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Welcome to SoC Labs |
Welcome to SoC Labs We look forward to working with you. As you learn about work flow stages and technology needed to build a SoC on SoC Labs you can add them to your profile. There is a button on each page, simply click to add it to your profile. You can always ask questions with the comments box. This is a good way to let people know what you are interested in and we can then help understand how we can collaborate. |
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We look forward to working… |
We look forward to working with you. As you learn about work flow stages and technology needed to build a SoC on SoC Labs you can add them to your profile. There is a button on each page, simply click to add it to your profile. You can always ask questions with the comments box. This is a good way to let people know what you are interested in and we can then help understand how we can collaborate. |
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Your Interests |
Hi, Looking at your Research Areas of RFIC, Analog Design I though you might be interested in this latest addition of a project from Texas A+M. RF-Powered Sensor Platform for Intelligent Groceries Transportation Monitoring Perhaps you can share some of your interests and we can see how best to collaborate?
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NanoSoC |
I am sorry for the delay in replying, June was very busy month. We develop the nanoSoC reference design specifically for the purpose of providing an easy way to learn about the design flows and SoC design. I would suggest you take a look at the early milestones in this project from Sydney. That might give you a good idea on how to progress? Sensing for Precision Agriculture If this is not helpful then let us know and we can see what else we can do? Happy to discuss things with you. |
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Comments
Hi John,Thank you so much…
Hi John,
Thank you so much for the warm welcome to the community. Sure I would love to learn more. We can have a meeting at your convenience and discuss it. Let me know which times and dates work for you.
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