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PSoC (Programmable System-on-Chip) is a family of microcontroller integrated circuits by Cypress Semiconductor. These chips include a CPU core and mixed-signal arrays of configurable integrated analog and digital peripherals. == History == In 2002, Cypress began shipping commercial quantities of the PSoC 1.〔Reuters: ("Cypress Hits Half-Billion Mark in Shipments of PSoC Programmable System-on-Chip Devices" ) 2009〕 To promote the PSoC, Cypress sponsored a "PSoC Design Challenge" in ''Circuit Cellar'' magazine in 2002 and 2004.〔Circuit Cellar:("PSoC Design Challenge 2002" )〕 In April 2013, Cypress released the fourth generation, PSoC 4. The PSoC 4 features a 32-bit ARM Cortex-M0 CPU, with programmable analog blocks (operational amplifiers and comparators), programmable digital blocks (PLD-based UDBs), programmable routing and flexible GPIO (route any function to any pin), a serial communication block (for SPI, UART, I²C), a timer/counter/PWM block and more.〔(" Fully Qualified Production Silicon for Cypress’s First Two PSoC® 4 Product Families Is Now Available" )〕 PSoC is used in devices as simple as Sonicare toothbrushes and Adidas sneakers, and as complex as the TiVo set-top box. One PSoC, using CapSense, controls the touch-sensitive scroll wheel on the Apple iPod click wheel. In 2014, Cypress extended the PSoC 4 family by integrating a Bluetooth Low Energy radio along with a PSoC 4 Cortex-M0-based SoC in a single, monolithic die. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「PSoC」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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