ucent, Moto put heat on TI with new DSP core
By Darrell Dunn Electronic Buyers' News (04/19/99, 04:56:07 PM EDT)
Lucent Technologies Inc. and Motorola Inc. have combined forces to unleash a new DSP core, the foundation for a series of devices aimed at unseating market leader Texas Instruments Inc.
The StarCore alliance, the result of more than a year of collaboration between Lucent's Microelectronics Group and Motorola's Semiconductor Products Sector, today will unveil its first effort, a DSP core that boasts 1.2 billion multiply-accumulate operations per second (MACs)-the equivalent of 3,000 mips.
"It's a two-horse race," said Thomas Brooks, marketing director for the alliance at the StarCore Technology Center in Atlanta. "There is Lucent and Motorola on one side, and TI on the other. The StarCore alliance brings together two DSP experts and two communications experts for best-in-class performance."
The jointly developed core, the SC140, is expected to begin sampling in the fourth quarter and enter volume production by the middle of next year. The SC140 core integrates 16 functional units: four multiply-accumulate units, four arithmetic-logic units, four bit-field units, two arithmetic-address units, and one branch-register unit. The architecture is scalable, and StarCore plans to add multiply-accumulate and arithmetic-logic units to other cores.
"It's an awfully sophisticated design and looks very good," said analyst Will Strauss of Forward Concepts Co., Tempe, Ariz. "You can argue that it's more powerful than anything TI has offered so far. But powerful only lasts about 20 minutes in this industry. The question now is, by the time this is in production, what will TI be announcing?"
The StarCore alliance-as well as a DSP partnership announced in February between Analog Devices Inc. and Intel Corp.-has generally been received by analysts as an attempt to catch up with TI's fifth-generation DSP architecture, the TMS320C6x, which the company first introduced two years ago and has now moved into volume production.
TI's highest-performance DSP in the market is the TMS320C6202, which offers about 500 million MACs and 2,000 mips. TI has shown roadmaps that would push the architecture to about 2 billion MACs and 5,000 mips sometime in the next two years.
The 'C6x and StarCore devices have both required existing customers to move to non-compatible architectures to achieve their desired performance increases, and observers believe the ADI-Intel architecture will follow a similar path. In fact, a move by all major DSP players to new architectures and software platforms could even offer TI a market advantage, claimed Mike Hames, vice president and worldwide manager for DSPs at TI in Houston.
"As the market leader, we were able to make the break two years ago," Hames said. "Now our competitors are racing against time trying to figure out how to get their architectures out the door."
Historically, Lucent and Motorola have trailed the DSP pack in attracting third-party support. The companies primarily had a market base that was limited to a few large customers, compared with the mass-market approach of TI and ADI.
Brooks said one advantage the StarCore alliance will have over TI is the ability to provide customers with the DSP industry's first dual-sourced architecture. Although Lucent and Motorola plan to independently develop standard and custom chips, they will use compatible software and compiler tools, which they said should encourage third-party development and support.
"Having an alternate source is something that has just not been possible in the DSP world," said Tom Starnes, an analyst with Dataquest Inc. in Austin, Texas. "It will provide [customers] with a level of comfort that's been shown to be important in the microprocessor industry."
Starnes described the StarCore architecture as impressive, and said it is necessary for Motorola and Lucent to remain competitive.
"You don't have a choice," he said. "All architectures get old and find it hard to keep up. You can stay frozen in history, or at some point you have to go to a completely new architecture."
Brooks said StarCore is the first "compiler-driven" DSP architecture, and added that 90% of the software code required can be written using high-level programming such as C or C++, instead of native assembly code. However, citing similar claims made by other DSP suppliers, Strauss warned that it may take some time for this claim to be proven in the market.
"There is not a single company that doesn't say their compiler is the greatest," Strauss said. "It will be at least another year before we can really tell how good the compilers are, and how bug-free."
The SC140 uses variable-length execution units that allow multiple 16-bit instructions and optional prefixes to be grouped together for single-cycle execution.
Motorola and Lucent both said they will continue to concentrate their StarCore efforts on the communications market, boosting performance while reducing power requirements. At 300-MHz operation, the SC140 core dissipates 0.1 mA/mips at 1.5 V. The core can also operate at 0.9 V to reduce power dissipation to 0.066 mA/mips, although the performance yield is reduced to 480 million MACs, or 1,200 mips. Norden do you think it is likely spectrum would assist lu and mot in development and support of this new architecture? danny |