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New Tech Tuesdays: RISC-V Designers Can Turn to These Development Tools Tommy Cummings

New Tech Tuesday

Join journalist Tommy Cummings for a weekly look at all things interesting, new, and noteworthy for design engineers.

RISC is short for reduced instruction set computer principles. Developed in 2010, RISC-V (pronounced risk-five) is a free and open instruction set architecture (ISA) that enables processor innovation through open standard collaboration. This makes RISC-V open-sourced, usable in an academic setting, and available in any hardware or software design without royalties.

Who doesn’t like royalty-free open source?

For developers, this means RISC-V is ideal for embedded applications, from IoT applications to computer devices to automotive applications and computer controllers. With RISC-V, developers are creating custom processors designed to handle the requirements of newer workloads for artificial intelligence, machine learning, Internet of Things, virtual reality, and augmented reality applications.

The development possibilities are endless. This week's New Tech Tuesdays examines three products in the RISC-V personal computer ecosystem that developers should embrace if they don’t already.

 

Let's Check the Bumblebee Core and Debug, Too

Seeed Studio Sipeed Longan Nano Development Board is ideal for anyone who wants to tinker with RISC-V processors. The board is based on the GD32VF103CBT6 MCU with a RISC-V 32-bit core by GigaDevice. The board is tiny (46.1mm x 20mm), but it has lots of functionality. It includes a 24mm RGB LCD screen, which means you're not going to want to watch a summer movie blockbuster on it. The board has a double-row pin layout design with a needle spacing of 700mils, inserted directly into a breadboard. It also has an on-board 8M passive crystal oscillator, 32.768kHz RTC low-speed crystal oscillator, mini TF slot, and uses Type-C USB interface.

Microchip Technology PolarFire® SoC FPGAs are the first system on chip (SoC) field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) with a RISC-V CPU cluster. That's a lot of acronyms. But automotive, defense, aerospace, and industrial designers who need automotive—and defense-grade programmable logic solutions will find the devices ideal for connected systems and smart applications, including IoT devices. More good news for developers: PolarFire FPGAs offer on-chip security features that enable secure communication, an encrypted bitstream, and a cryptographically secured supply chain, ensuring tamper-proof solutions.

SiFive HiFive Unmatched Linux Development Platform is a development tool built on a standard desktop Mini-ITX form factor (170mm x 170mm) for embedded platforms. SiFive calls its product the world's fastest native RISC-V development platform. The HiFive Unmatched features the Freedom U740 Linux-capable, multi-core, 64-bit dual-issue RISC‑V processor. The motherboard comes with a complete development environment where developers can create RISC-V-based applications from bare-metal to Linux-based systems.

Tuesday's Take

The simple fixed-base ISA and modular fixed standard extensions have made it simple for researchers, teachers, and students to utilize RISC-V principles to learn and push the boundaries of design. This is always a good sign.



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Tommy Cummings is a freelance writer/editor based in Texas. He's had a journalism career that has spanned more than 40 years. He contributes to Texas Monthly and Oklahoma Today magazines. He's also worked at The Dallas Morning News, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, San Francisco Chronicle, and others. Tommy covered the dot-com boom in Silicon Valley and has been a digital content and audience engagement editor at news outlets. Tommy worked at Mouser Electronics from 2018 to 2021 as a technical content and product content specialist.


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