Schedule
Schedule
Dirk
With the availability of robust silicon-proven open-source tools, IPs, and process design kits (PDKs), it is now possible to build complex chips without industry tools. This is exactly what we did to design our first open-everything FABulous FPGA, which is an example of open silicon that is designed and programmed entirely with open tools. Produced in the Skywater 130nm process node, our chip features 672 LUTs (each with 4 inputs and a flop), 6 DSP blocks (8x8 bit multipliers with 20-bit accumulators), 8 BRAMs (with 1KB each), and 12 register file primitives (each having 32 4-bit words with 1 write and 2 read ports). The resources are sufficient to run, for instance, a small RISC-V system on the fabric. The FPGA comes with a small board that is designed to fit into an audio cassette case and that can be programmed directly via an USB interface. Moreover, the FPGA supports partial reconfiguration, which allows us to swap the logic of parts of the FPGA while continuing operation in the rest of the chip. The chip was designed with the help of the versatile FABulous framework, which integrates several further open-source projects, including Yosys, nextpnr, the Verilator, OpenRAM, and the OpenLane tool suite. FABulous was used for various embedded FPGAs, including multiple designs manufactured in the TSMC 28nm process node. The talk will discuss and analyze differences and similarities with industry FPGAs and dive into design decision taken and optimizations applied to deliver good quality of results (with respect to area cost and performance). The talk will highlight state-of-the-art in open-source FPGA chip design and provide a deeper than usual discussion on the design principles of these devices.
Adam Batori, Robert Pafford
Despite the recent popularity and breadth of offerings of low-cost RF microcontrollers, there is a shared absence of documentation for the internal workings of their RF hardware. Vendors might provide an API for their supported protocols, such as BLE, but their documentation will only provide as much detail as necessary to use these libraries. For practically every BLE MCU available to hobbyists, interfacing with the on-chip radio is limited to secret ROMs or binary blobs. In this talk, we will finally peel back the curtain on one of these RF MCUs, giving the ability to understand and unlock the full potential of the hardware to operate in new modes.
Metal_Warrior
Bildervortrag zum Thema "Nachhaltige Inneneinrichtung" mit Mitbringseln zum Anfassen sowie Tipps & Tricks zu Konstruktion, Gestaltung und Durchführung