To address the broader range of power, performance and area (PPA) demands of embedded applications, Synopsys, Inc. (Nasdaq: SNPS) today announced it has expanded its DesignWare® ARC® Processor IP ...
In the early 2000s, digital signal processors (DSP) were simple in architecture and limited in performance, but complex in programming. However, they evolved to meet of the increased performance ...
Digital signal processors (DSPs) earn their living by doing certain analog jobs better than analog circuitry. In some cases, where analog circuits can’t even be considered for a task due to cost or ...
Use left and right arrow keys to seek audio. Ubitium has just revealed that it is developing the first Universal Processor, with the RISC-V startup combining CPU, GPU, DSP, and FPGA into a single chip ...
There’s almost nothing worse than an audio conference disrupted by unwanted noises, echoes or distortions. This is where Shure intuitive technology enters. Audio distortion is the death of ...
BW Broadcast based in the U.K. is touting a DSP FM processor that retails for $1,700. Broadcast Warehouse says the DSPX mini extends a line that includes the DSPX and a new six-band version, the ...
As DSP technologies find their way into high-end, high-complexity commercial and consumer applications, developers are discovering the limitations of traditional Digital Signal Processors (DSPs) to ...
Harnessing The Power Of DSPs Before semiconductor building blocks or single-chip solutions came on the scene, digital signal processing (DSP) problems, primarily in the military arena, were solved ...
It can be argued that quality audio is the most critical component in the effectiveness of an AV system. More so than inadequate video or complex operation, unintelligible audio makes it very ...
The history of digital signal processing has moved from dedicated DSP chips to FPGAs. Now Intel CPUs are handling the processing duties for some live mixing boards, aided by simple operating systems ...
Ever wondered how Digital Signal Processing (DSP) works? Digital Signal Processing is everywhere. It's in your TV, your phone, your in-car entertainment system, in hospitals, radar systems and ...