1/1
What's the progress?
by indirasulo on Oct 19, 2013 |
indirasulo
Posts: 29 Joined: Jan 12, 2012 Last seen: Sep 26, 2014 |
||
subj.
|
RE: What's the progress?
by hdecharn on Nov 16, 2013 |
hdecharn
Posts: 2 Joined: Jun 14, 2011 Last seen: Jul 23, 2014 |
||
I think the project is dead!
|
RE: What's the progress?
by indirasulo on Nov 23, 2013 |
indirasulo
Posts: 29 Joined: Jan 12, 2012 Last seen: Sep 26, 2014 |
||
It looks like the OpenCores people were able to pull this off as a part of KnCMiner, so at least some design work was done.
|
RE: What's the progress?
by joelagnel on Nov 25, 2013 |
joelagnel
Posts: 3 Joined: Oct 13, 2013 Last seen: May 20, 2014 |
||
I'm actually wondering- Beyond Semiconductors created several commercial variants with OpenRISC, are they also the ones creating the reference ASIC implementation, since they have past experience doing so with the same core? I believe Beyond was also founded by the same folks as OpenCores.
What I'm not fully clear about the goals and directions of the ASIC implementation, the current status, and the people/companies that are driving it. Appreciate any information about this. thanks, -Joel |
RE: What's the progress?
by meitoku on May 5, 2014 |
meitoku
Posts: 26 Joined: Nov 21, 2013 Last seen: Oct 18, 2015 |
||
Is this project alive or it's now abandoned?
|
RE: What's the progress?
by lysander on May 28, 2014 |
lysander
Posts: 10 Joined: Feb 13, 2009 Last seen: May 29, 2014 |
||
Seems like they took the money and sort of ran with it. The project was not economically feasible to begin with.
People interested in embedded OpenRISC to integrate microprocessors in their ASICs without paying licenses (ARM, Microblaze, etc) can do so regardless, but it is hard and expensive to come up with a microcontroller implementation that is commercially sound and competitive with other solutions. The design process is long and costly, and even if the result is technically good you may fail if the result does not find a market niche. This said, the OpenRISC ASIC proposal has not been open at all; the team in charge decided on their own what to do with their resources and worked on an FPGA-based development board of which provided no fabrication files since... well, they're selling it. Although disingenuous (they've taken donations from the community but nearly zero feedback or any direct participation from external designers) this is perfectly understandable as they are a company after all. However I think they should show at least a glimpse of honesty, shut down the donation page (why is it still up anyway?), close the forum thread and make an official announcement. But of course that would raise the obvious question: "hey, where did the money go?" |
RE: What's the progress?
by maresv on Jul 8, 2014 |
maresv
Posts: 22 Joined: Oct 28, 2008 Last seen: Jul 8, 2014 |
||
Without any answer, ha, ha, ha ...
|
1/1