On Mon, 8 May 2017 06:24:08 +0100 Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton <[email protected]> wrote: > On Mon, May 8, 2017 at 4:00 AM, David Niklas <[email protected]> wrote: <snip> > >> > important to avoid, because mixed analog and digital is incredibly > >> > hard to get right. also note that things like HDMI, SATA, and even > >> > ethernet are quite deliberately NOT on the list. Ethernet RMII > >> > (which is digital) could be implemented in software using a minion > >> > core. the advantage of using the opencores VGA (actually LCD) > >> > controller is: i already have the full source for a *complete* > >> > linux driver. > > > > Considering that analog was around *long* before digital I'm surprised > > that it is "Hard to get right", > > analog isn't "hard". digital isn't "hard". specifically *MIXING* > them is ultra-hard. > > > is there a reason for this? > > completely different processes and design criteria. the restrictions > (design rules) placed on digital ASIC layouts have to be adhered to in > the *analog* areas: you can't just change the stack to suit the analog > areas. i don't know the full details, but i know someone with 30 > years experience of working with ASICs who does. > > > Isn't there a chip for just this kind of thing? > > no. not a custom one... and we're taking custom ASICs.
Forgive me for contradicting you again, but don't all computers that have a MIC in jack using some sort of analog to digital converter? And vice-versa with Headphone out? I think they all use PCM. Would such a converter be suitable? Why? Thanks, David _______________________________________________ arm-netbook mailing list [email protected] http://lists.phcomp.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/arm-netbook Send large attachments to [email protected]
