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| developer = Freescale | | developer = Freescale | ||
| developer 2 = NXP | | developer 2 = NXP | ||
− | | manufacturer = | + | | manufacturer = TSMC |
− | | manufacturer 2 = | + | | manufacturer 2 = |
| type = System on Chips | | type = System on Chips | ||
| first announced = June 16, 2008 | | first announced = June 16, 2008 | ||
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Introduced in 2008 by [[Freescale]] as a successor to the {{freescale|PowerQUICC}} family, then one of industry's most popular communications processors. Like the PowerQUICC brand, QorIQ spanned the entire range of products from low-power and low-cost to large multi-core designs. Original designs were based on the [[POWER]] architecture. In 2012 Freescale announced the Layerscape series that adopts the [[ARM]] architecture which Freescale/NXP has been using since. | Introduced in 2008 by [[Freescale]] as a successor to the {{freescale|PowerQUICC}} family, then one of industry's most popular communications processors. Like the PowerQUICC brand, QorIQ spanned the entire range of products from low-power and low-cost to large multi-core designs. Original designs were based on the [[POWER]] architecture. In 2012 Freescale announced the Layerscape series that adopts the [[ARM]] architecture which Freescale/NXP has been using since. | ||
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{{empty section}} | {{empty section}} | ||
Facts about "QorIQ - NXP"
designer | Freescale + and NXP + |
first announced | June 16, 2008 + |
first launched | June 16, 2008 + |
full page name | nxp/qoriq + |
instance of | system on a chip family + |
main designer | Freescale + |
manufacturer | TSMC + and IBM + |
name | QorIQ + |
process | 45 nm (0.045 μm, 4.5e-5 mm) +, 32 nm (0.032 μm, 3.2e-5 mm) +, 20 nm (0.02 μm, 2.0e-5 mm) + and 16 nm (0.016 μm, 1.6e-5 mm) + |
technology | CMOS + |
word size | 32 bit (4 octets, 8 nibbles) + and 64 bit (8 octets, 16 nibbles) + |