But there’s a real sweet spot when you have a CPU and an FPGA together. Intel (or Altera, if you prefer) has the NIOS II CPU core, but that’s hard to configure, right? Maybe not, thanks to a ...
That’s the CPU that eventually drove the Pano for [Ttsiodras]. The FPGA is large enough that he was able to get two 50 MHz cores in the box. You can even simulate the CPU before committing it to ...
Like many a decade ago, we were enthusiastic about the prospect of triple-hybrid systems in the datacenter. We were convinced that there was a place for CPUs, for GPUs, and for FPGAs in complex and ...