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RE: [oc] Re: Need a little direction




We bought the Motorola MCF5206E from Future Electronics.

Richard

>Richard,
>
>quick, give me the name of your supplier. Do they have the good stuff? lol
>Under USD $10? hmmm so that means Newark are rip-off merchants then?
>http://www.newark.com/psearch/searchResults.jsp?action=1&First=0&NPart=&MPar
>t=MCF5206&APart=&MName=motorola&KWord=&advancedSearch.x=97&advancedSearch.y=
>38
>
>Might it be better to find the smallest 'soft-processor' core thats freely
>available
>instead? Anybody know which this would be?
>
>Why work to a clock if you don't have to I say. Lets hear it for the async
>boys.
>Clock cycles are like policemen, never one around when you need them. ;-)

Correct but that's also the nice part about them, right ?? Anyway, for a 
processor you need a clock, period.


Richard

>Paul
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: owner-cores@opencores.org [mailto:owner-cores@opencores.org]On
>Behalf Of Richard Herveille
>Sent: 13 November 2001 10:14
>To: cores@opencores.org
>Subject: Re: [oc] Re: Need a little direction
>
>
>Depends also on the computation power you need, take a look at these too:
>1) Motorola Coldfire (e.g. MCF5206e)
>2) Intel XScale (next generation StrongArm)
>
>Both are available at the moment. I know for sure that the MCF5206e should
>be available below USD10,=.
>
>
>Richard
>
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