Re: Prototyping?
- From: Ben Jackson <ben@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 01 Nov 2007 17:47:42 -0500
On 2007-10-30, Joerg <notthisjoergsch@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Depends. When you want to do unorthodox things a CPLD or FPGA doesn't
cut it.
If you want to prototype with CPLDs and FPGAs, just get a dev board.
You can generally find one with the right combination of common peripherals
already on it. Much cheaper and faster than designing your own board...
--
Ben Jackson AD7GD
<ben@xxxxxxx>
http://www.ben.com/
.
Relevant Pages
- Re: Prototyping?
... When you want to do unorthodox things a CPLD or FPGA doesn't ... If you want to prototype with CPLDs and FPGAs, ... Much cheaper and faster than designing your own board... ... (sci.electronics.design) - Re: Bidirectional Bus
... The FPGA is being programmed but the bus does not release. ... few of the Switch pins of the CPLD and I learned that using a pullup ... on one of the pin in the XC2C64A causes all pins to in a pullup state. ... (comp.arch.fpga) - Re: Bidirectional Bus
... data and fpga_cclk into the FPGA the done pin goes high. ... drive the data bus to CPLD and then finally into an external 8 LED ... --SIGNAL ASSIGNMENT ... if rising_edgethen ... (comp.arch.fpga) - Re: Bidirectional Bus
... data and fpga_cclk into the FPGA the done pin goes high. ... drive the data bus to CPLD and then finally into an external 8 LED ... --SIGNAL ASSIGNMENT ... if rising_edgethen ... (comp.arch.fpga) - Re: Bidirectional Bus
... The FPGA is being programmed but the bus does not release. ... few of the Switch pins of the CPLD and I learned that using a pullup ... on one of the pin in the XC2C64A causes all pins to in a pullup state. ... (comp.arch.fpga) |
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