
Products
ARM Cortex - The Future Of Microcontrollers
ARM (Advanced RISC Machines) is one of the largest suppliers of CPU cores worldwide, licensing its cores to the key players in the microcontroller market. ARM’s new range of Cortex processors is rapidly becoming an industry standard.
ARM Seminar on 19th May 2009 in Birmingham, UK
With representation from most of the major players in the world of ARM, this seminar will give you an update on the state of the art both today and in the near future.
ARM will start the seminar with a presentation on its technology and will be followed by a series of presentations from suppliers using the cores including STMicroelectronics, NXP, TI, Luminary, Freescale, Keil, National Instruments and Microsoft.
For more agenda details and registration please, link to Hitex, who organise this event supported by Silica.
Silica's ARM Cortex-based MCU Offering
ARM Cortex™-M3
in LPC17xx from NXP | in STM32 from STMicroelectronics |
The LPC1700 series of low power cost-effective Cortex-M3 MCUs feature best-in-class peripheral support such as Ethernet, USB 2.0 Host/OTG/Device, and CAN 2.0B. Operating at speeds up to 100 MHz, they have up to 512 KB of FLASH, up to 64 KB of SRAM, 12-bit A/D and 10-bit D/A converters as well as an internal RC oscillator. | The STM32 family of 32-bit Flash MCUs benefit from Cortex-M3 architectural enhancements (including the Thumb-2® instruction set) that deliver improved performance combined with better code density, and a tightly coupled nested vectored interrupt controller that significantly speeds response to interrupts, all combined with industry-leading power consumption. |
ARM Cortex™-A8 in OMAP35x from Texas Instruments
OMAP35x processors are the first to market with the high-performing ARM® Cortex™-A8 core offering an unprecedented combination of laptop-like performance at handheld power levels in a single chip.
Windows CE6.0 for ARM Platforms
Discover more about Windows CE6.0 during the ARM seminar! Learn about how the architecture is built up and what functions are supported. Discover how, because of the tested component set, the Win32 API, and the Rapid GUI development, Win CE can help you with time and cost to market. Discover how easy it is to port a Win CE OS on to an ARM platform using Platform Builder and established Board Support Packages.
Date & Venue
19th May 2009 National Motor Cycle Museum, Birmingham, UK Seminar fee: £ 40.- |
Registration
Online registration @ Hitex
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