a techfocus media publication :: June 24, 2008 :: volume XI, no. 13

FROM THE EDITOR

This week, we are thrilled to be welcoming Jim Turley back to Embedded Technology Journal.  Jim is a leading authority on embedded system design, and he’ll be sharing his wisdom and insight with us regularly here at Embedded Technology Journal.  His first feature article this week looks at progress in tiny, low-power displays suitable for a variety of embedded applications.

Thanks for reading! If there's anything we can do to make our publications more useful to you, please let us know at: comments@embeddedtechjournal.com. If you'd rather sound off in public, please post your comments or questions in our new Journal Forums.

Kevin Morris – Editor in Chief
Techfocus Media, Inc.

EVENTS and ANNOUNCEMENTS

Xilinx and Avnet Deliver Lowest Total Cost. . .  Period.
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LATEST NEWS

June 24, 2008

Atmel Announces ARM Cortex-M3 License and AT91SAM3 Flash MCU Family

Future Agenda for Radio Technology Development Uncovered at SDR Forum Workshop

Pentek Introduces High-Speed Software Radio PMC Module with Power Meter and Beamforming Capabilities

Agility Introduces Programmable Platform for Image and Signal Processing

Sigma Designs Announces CoAir, the World’s First Ultrawideband Chipset With Integrated Wireless, Coax and Gigabit Ethernet for High Speed Whole Home Networking

June 23, 2008

ENlight UK Ltd launches SNIPER POWER!

Jennic First to Introduce 32-Bit ZigBee PRO Wireless Microcontroller

SEGGER introduces embOS/IP Web server and embOS/IP FTP server

Embedded Hardware/Software Design Marketplace for Developers to Change Dramatically

Mocana’s New NanoDefender™ Stops Malware and Viruses on Devices

Cypress’s New Portfolio of Touchscreen Solutions Includes Multi-Touch All Point Offering On a Single Chip

VirtualLogix Executive to Present How the Next Wave of Virtualization Will Impact Electronic Devices at 2008 Virtualization Conference and Expo

June 20, 2008

Reflective flexible liquid crystal display technology from the University of Strathclyde enables solar powered electronic display advertisements

Research and Markets: Latest Report Forecasts That the Number of HSPA/LTE Mobile Broadband Subscriptions in EU23+2 Will Reach 48.9 Million by 2013

June 19, 2008

New Cypress PSoC® Programmer 3.0 Offers Easy-to-Use, Customizable Interface and Faster Programming Times

DisplayPort connector provides external high definition link

June 18, 2008

New publishing and version control features from Altium put real control of design data back in organizations’ hands

On2 Joins MIPS(R) Alliance Program; Leading Video Codec Solutions Now Available for MIPS-Based(TM) Processors

FuturePlus Systems Introduces World’s Fastest DDR3 Interposer for Tektronix Logic Analyzers

Intelligent TFT evaluation platform enables easy and rapid integration of displays into a product

Micrium Makes FAT Fail-Safe with New uC/FS Journaling Feature

MontaVista Mobilinux Optimized for Freescale i.MX31 Multimedia Applications Processor


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CURRENT FEATURE ARTICLES

Displaying the Future
Embedded Displays Go Light and Cool
(Jim Turley)
A Passel of Processors
NVIDIA’s Tesla T10P Blurs Some Lines
(Kevin Morris)
Shortening the Rope
LRDA Checks Cert C and MISRA C++ (Bryon Moyer)
New Toys
(Dick Selwood)
Shared Responsibility
Dynamic Analysis for Race Conditions and Deadlocks in Java
(Bryon Moyer)
Special Recognition
A Neural Network for Embedded Systems
(Bryon Moyer)

Multicore Messaging Manifested
Polycore Implements MCAPI
(Bryon Moyer)

JOURNAL WEBCASTS

CHALK TALK Power Matters. Trying to tame power consumption in your battery-powered device? Join Journal Webcasts host Amelia Dalton as she chats with Wendy Lockhart of Actel about how you can use ultra-low power programmable devices from Actel in even the most power-sensitive designs. (Actel)

CHALK TALK Creating Secure Mobile Devices With Open Kernel Labs OKL4. In this Chalk Talk, Amelia Dalton delves into the world of software security and microkernels in mobile devices with Gernot Heiser and Rob McCammon of Open Kernel Labs. (Open Kernel Labs)

CHALK TALK Low Power Design With Xilinx and Linear Technology. Join Amelia Dalton as she chats with Mark Moran of Xilinx and Afshin Odabaee of Linear Technology about low power FPGA based designs. (Xilinx)

CHALK TALK Designing Embedded Systems With Linux and low cost FPGAs. Join Amelia Dalton as she chats with industry experts about simplifying embedded systems design with Linux running on low-cost programmable system-on-chip platforms. (Xilinx)

CHALK TALK Lowest Total System Cost With Xilinx
Spartan-3
. Amelia Dalton chats with Mark Moran of Xilinx about reducing your overall system cost with Xilinx Spartan-3 family of FPGAs (Xilinx)


CHALK TALK Low Cost FPGA with Serdes Lattice ECP2M. Amelia Dalton talks with Bertrand Leigh of Lattice Semiconductor about low-cost FPGAs with multi-gigabit SerDes interface capability. (Lattice Semiconductor)

[click here for more webcasts]


Displaying the Future
Embedded Displays Go Light and Cool

(Jim Turley)

To see the future of embedded design, all we have to do is watch Tom Cruise.

Partway through “Minority Report,” the actor waves his hands in front on an enormous projection screen/hologram. He’s pushing around icons and shifting windows, an action we recognize immediately because they’re just like what we do every day with a typical Mac, PC, or iPhone. The only thing that’s different, really, is that he’s not physically touching anything. It’s all very cool and frankly is the only part of the movie most of us remember.

Elsewhere in the movie, he opens a cereal box and studiously ignores the TV commercial that’s somehow playing on the back of the box. As interesting and unexpected as these effects are, neither technology is out of reach of today’s embedded designers. In fact, the display-on-a-cardboard-box stuff is pretty widely available and could be very handy for small, curved, space-constrained, or power-limited designs.

A half-dozen companies produce seven-segment LCD displays that are thin enough (about 0.5 mm thick) to embed right into your own cardboard box or the face plate of small embedded systems. Originally developed for “smart” credit cards, these displays are also moderately flexible and use almost no power. They’re not fast – the displays sometimes take nearly a second to update – but for gee-whiz factor they’re hard to beat.

Aveso, SiPix, eInk, Citala, Kent Displays, and other companies all produce similar modules that are competitive with one another. They’re all flat, thin, and low-power, and they all have seven-segment (i.e., numeric) displays like you’d see on a calculator. Their interfaces are different, and some modules have more intelligence than others. Some vendors even give you a choice of colors, if that’s important to you.

The Primero module from Aveso is typical of most companies’ offerings. It’s got a six-digit display laminated to a flexible printed circuit that contains the display drivers and a Texas Instruments MSP430 controller chip. The display itself is about an inch high and appears blue on a golden background. The MSP430 chip is there to handle the intricacies of the display. All you have to do is talk to the microcontroller and let it update the display. Not incidentally, the MSP430 is overkill for this application; it’s got plenty of excess performance and memory space for your own software. As long as you’re happy writing MSP430 code, it’s probably the only microcontroller you’ll need for a reasonable display subsystem.

If you dislike TI’s MSP430 or you just prefer to “bit bang” your own display drivers, you can also buy the module without the microcontroller. It’s obviously cheaper, but you’ll have to babysit each display segment to keep them updated and refreshed. In this “headless” mode you’ll have nearly 100 I/O lines to manage. Still, if you’ve already got a microprocessor or microcontroller in your system and just want to add a flat, dumb display this may be just the ticket.

SiPix offers a similar product, which it calls ePaper. Like Aveso’s display, it’s about an inch high, a fraction of a millimeter thick, and reasonably flexible. It’s also electrophoretic (it doesn’t glow, it’s reflective) and bistable, meaning the display holds its image even after you’ve removed the power. The effect is kind of eerie. You can literally yank the power leads off the display and it doesn’t go blank. Very weird but also very useful for saving energy. SiPix offers more color choices than Aveso, but, like Aveso, SiPix sells the display either with or without an embedded microcontroller. In the case of SiPix, it’s a 6502-based chip, so you’ll finally be able to put those Apple ][
programming skills you learned in high school to good use. [more]


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