What is xa Spartan 3e FPGA?
The XA Spartan®-3E FPGA is the world’s lowest cost logic optimized full feature platform of five devices with system gates ranging from 100K to 1.6M gates, and I/Os ranging from 66 to 376 I/Os, with density migration. What applications is this good for? Video and graphics ,and automotive networking.
What are Spartan-6 devices?
Built on a proven 45nm technology, Spartan-6 devices offer: Spartan®-6 devices offer industry-leading connectivity features such as high logic-to-pin ratios, small form-factor packaging, MicroBlaze™ soft processor, and a diverse number of supported I/O protocols.
What is the Spartan-7 product advantage?
Spartan-7 Product Advantage. Spartan®-7 devices, the newest addition to the Cost-Optimized Portfolio, offer the best in class performance per watt, along with small form factor packaging to meet the most stringent requirements. These devices feature a MicroBlaze™ soft processor running over 200 DMIPs with 800Mb/s DDR3 support built on 28nm…
What are Spartan-7 MicroBlaze devices?
These devices feature a MicroBlaze™ soft processor running over 200 DMIPs with 800Mb/s DDR3 support built on 28nm technology. Additionally, Spartan-7 devices offer an integrated ADC, dedicated security features, and Q-grade (-40 to +125°C) on all commercial devices.
How to connect the Spartan 3e FPGA to the basys2?
Introducing the Spartan 3E FPGA and VHDL 20 / 122 For the Basys2: •Connect your board to the USB port •Launch Digilent’s Adept software •If the device isn’t automatically detected, click on the “Device manager” and add it to the device table.
Is there an ADC for the Spartan 3e FPGA?
Introducing the Spartan 3E FPGA and VHDL 110 / 122 Chapter 24 Using an ADC This chapter is only applicable to the Papilio One board when used with the LogicStart MegaWing, as the Basys2 does not include any ADC functionality – it is still a useful read as it shows how simple peripherals can be to interface to.
What is the best way to simulate an FPGA project?
Unlike debugging software, simulating an FPGA project doesn’t run it on the actual hardware – the closest equivalent you may have experience with is the simulation of a microcontroller in MPLAB or WinAVR.