News & Analysis

Atmel adopts tools for DSP from Target

Peter Clarke

7/20/2006 10:41 AM EDT

LONDON — After more than a year of evaluation and development work Atmel Corp. has acknowledged that it has adopted the Chess/Checkers retargetable tool suite from Target Compiler Technologies NV as a development environment for a floating-point DSP within a dual-processor platform.

The dual-processor platform from Atmel (San Jose, Calif.) is aimed at sound processing in general and includes telephones, robotics, acoustic diagnostics, music synthesis, and ultrasound scanners.

The Chess/Checkers retargetable tool suite from Target (Leuven, Belgium), which is built around a graph-based C compiler technology, was licensed originally by Atmel in May 2005.

“In the first phase, we used Target’s nML processor description language and the retargetable tool suite to model our floating-point DSP architecture,” said Benedetto Altieri, director of Atmel’s DSP center in Rome, Italy, in a statement issued by Target. “We were able to tune the instruction-set architecture for better performance, using feedback from Target’s retargetable compiler and simulator. In the second phase, a software development tool-kit for the DSP was generated, which Atmel can now deliver to its customers and partners,” Altieri explained.


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