Other Parts Discussed in Post: TUSB1310

Well it has been a while, but I thought I would share some of what I have been talking with customers about over the last couple of months.

Customers are really starting to look at using SuperSpeed USB for a wide variety of applications - in the last few weeks examples I have been hit with are data acquisition unit, a data logger, A/D converter, a camera, and image processing unit.  What they all have in common is that they produce a lot of content/data and want to get it from the "sensor" to the PC fro processing rapidly.  The problem they are facing is that all of the peripheral devices available on the market today are geared towards storage applications - like the TUSB9260 or TUSB9261.

Our TUSB1310 presents a solution for these customers.  The TUSB1310 is a SuperSpeed USB PHYsical layer or transceiver.  It is the analog portion of the USB device and can be used in conjunction with an FPGA that incorporates the digital USB 3.0 device controller function to implement any device function that a customer can envision - the only limitation being the size/space of the FPGA!

We have an implementation guideavailable that discusses board layout and power issues, but much of the critical design activity is really the FPGA that is used.  There are multiple third parties offering full SuperSpeed USB Device development environments featuring the TUSB1310 as the PHYsical layer.

Other IP Companies are starting to offer platforms as well - check back later and I will update the list as more offerings go public.

Also, let me know what you are wanting to do with SuperSpeed USB!

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  • "The long, slow road to the SuperSpeed fast lane" is how it feels sometimes. Was the initial USB 1.x spec this drawn out? But all in due time... It sounds like the TUSB1310 is a critical component for the inevitable USB3 A/V market. It it likely to end up in HD TV tuners, video capture gear and handheld HD camcorders?

    I'm also curious about the Audio market which doesn't seem nearly as bandwidth intensive - but still has a lot to gain - at least in terms of latency and overhead.

    The benefits of SuperSpeed seem so insanely compelling to consumers. I'm just amazed tho at how agonizingly slow it seems to be reaching the consumers hands. Have Apple and Intel's heel dragging really been the biggest 'bottle-neck' of all?

    Rus

    http://www.mac-usb3.com

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  • "The long, slow road to the SuperSpeed fast lane" is how it feels sometimes. Was the initial USB 1.x spec this drawn out? But all in due time... It sounds like the TUSB1310 is a critical component for the inevitable USB3 A/V market. It it likely to end up in HD TV tuners, video capture gear and handheld HD camcorders?

    I'm also curious about the Audio market which doesn't seem nearly as bandwidth intensive - but still has a lot to gain - at least in terms of latency and overhead.

    The benefits of SuperSpeed seem so insanely compelling to consumers. I'm just amazed tho at how agonizingly slow it seems to be reaching the consumers hands. Have Apple and Intel's heel dragging really been the biggest 'bottle-neck' of all?

    Rus

    http://www.mac-usb3.com

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