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News section > Consumer Electronics

QORC delivers open source tools for QuickLogic FPGAs

2020-06-20 Editor:Super administratorSource:Original


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This initiative engenders the emerging trend toward open source tooling, significantly broadens access to the company’s products, and enables both hardware and software developers with tools supported by both the user community and QuickLogic.

The company’s initial open source development tools, developed by Antmicro in collaboration with QuickLogic and Google, include complete support for its EOS S3 low power voice and sensor processing MCU with embedded FPGA, and its PolarPro 3E discrete FPGA family.Support for additional QuickLogic products, including QuickAI and support for its eFPGA IP offering will be added over the next few months.


EOS S3 Open Source Development Tools:

  • FPGA Development Flow: SymbiFlow – Open source tools for the optimization and automation of the FPGA design flow, from Verilog to bitstream generation. These tools enable innovation by making FPGAs more accessible to a broader community.

  • SoC Emulation: Renode – Antmicro’s Renode is an open source simulation framework for rapid prototyping, development and testing of multi-node systems. Utilizing Renode gives developers the flexibility to fully evaluate multiple development board applications.

  • Zephyr Real Time Operating System (RTOS) – The Zephyr RTOS is an open source, vendor-neutral, compact, real-time operating system running on the Arm® Cortex®-M4F for connected, resource-constrained and embedded devices in applications that require security and safety.

  • QuickFeather Development Kit – A small form factor, 100% open source hardware development kit ideal for the next generation of low-power Machine Learning (ML) capable IoT devices.


Traditionally, programmable logic vendors offered and supported only proprietary synthesis, place and route tools. Open source tools were relegated to hobbyists, academics, and independent consultants.

However, the electronics industry is starting to see a shift toward open sourced hardware and software as it provides flexibility, vendor and community support, longevity, and adaptability to each engineer’s design flow.Google and Antmicro have been noteworthy influencers in this market, increasing the breadth of supported architectures and quality of results for the open source tools.

They are now not only viable but desirable for the majority of the development community, including design teams at many of the industry’s largest companies.


    Source: This news is taken from www.electronicsweekly.com

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