tomcroban wrote:
Thanks for the information - I had been misinformed about the PC/104 situation.
The SAM7X family was introduced in the whole SAM7 press release. First one that came up for me on a web search was:
http://deviceforge.com/news/NS6091680867.htmlSearch on AT91SAM7X128 for more? It is going to be nice since it looks like it will cost less and be more readily available then the ASIX/Realtek MACs themselves!
Now I remember seeing a product brouchure showing the full family. But I don't expect to see even samples on this part until second half of this year. The literature says the other parts should be in full production now and I still have not figured out how to even get samples. I have sent three messages and am still waiting for a reply.
As to the cost, I am amazed at the prices of some of the LAN chips. I am planning to use the SMSC LAN91C111 chip, but it is nearly $20 unless I can get some relief from a disti. Of course, all savings will be passed onto the customer ;^) Actually, it is going to be tough to build this board the way I want to sell at $99, but I am going to do my best. I just hope the volumes are there to get good pricing from the distis.
tomcroban wrote:
I know you asked it in a seperate question - but since I cannot answer all of the question:
Atmel is advertising a max throughput of 12.5Mb/s on the SSC. Since the datasheet goes back and forth between freq. being 50MHz or 55MHz, I think it is the div/4 actual throughput like you suggest.
If you plan to put the core to the ultra low power mode of 500Hz, it is expected that the ADC and Peripherals are de-activated (per the datasheet).
I don't expect to pull it all the way down to 500 Hz, but 1 MHz might be nice. I believe that brings the core current to the low mA range. I'll just have to make sure I design the SSC interface in the FPGA to work with that.
Too bad about the SSC speed being 12.5 Mbps. I was hoping it would be the higher 25 Mbps. Without an external data bus, the SSC seems like the fastest way to get data in/out of the FPGA and Ethernet chips. But in reality, 100 Mbps Ethernet does not get anywhere near that in a real network. So 12.5 Mbps won't be a major drag.
