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Is there a comprehensive comparison of ADI Audio DSPs to help choosing one for a product?

Category: Hardware

Ive been looking for some sort of comparison of ADI DSP's to help choose one for development and end product. But I cant find anything that explains why you would choose say Backfin over Sigma or vice-versa, or any of the other DSP lines.

Its quite confusing what the main merits are of each line and the product selectors on ADI only show very general specs. I find the product descriptions very general too and no help.

I was hoping there might be a video but I've found not anything to help make an informed choice.

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  • Hello Ferrograph,

    The comparison you are asking about does not exist and is difficult. Part of it is the history here in the company. The SHARC and BLACKFIN lines are designed and supported by the DSP group. The SigmaDSP line is designed and supported by the audio group which has since been split up into consumer and automotive teams. Most of it is still in the consumer group which is where I am. 

    The basic comparison is that the SigmaDSP is deigned for audio. It has many features internally what make it good and efficient for processing audio. SigmaStudio makes it easy to use. The stream based processing makes it dependable less susceptive to time based criteria like interrupts. However, they are nowhere near as flexible and programmable than the general purpose DSPs. Those you can program in C. the SigmaDSP you cannot. The tools are free for SigmaDSP making it low cost development. The SHARC and Blackfin are not free and if you need to do anything fancy you end up having to buy 3rd party extensions raising the cost of development. 

    The SHARC and Blackfin have good security features. The SigmaDSP does not. 

    Then the further comparison starts going down the road of what the application is. Some of it I already touched on above but I may have missed some others. 

    So this is the crib notes version. You can always contact your local sales rep and they can often help you with the specifics of your application. 

    Sometimes the choice is a no-brainer and often it can be 50/50 and come down to cost, development time, familiarity with the tools, etc. 

    Thanks,

    Dave T

  • Thanks Dave,

    This was very useful crib notes on the DSP lines and gave me what I was looking for. Functionally and cost wise I think Sigma is the right DSP since my product will have a separate micro controller and is an audio product. 

    I have concerns about security though and prevention of copying of the DSP design. Is anything possible with Sigma?

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  • Thanks Dave,

    This was very useful crib notes on the DSP lines and gave me what I was looking for. Functionally and cost wise I think Sigma is the right DSP since my product will have a separate micro controller and is an audio product. 

    I have concerns about security though and prevention of copying of the DSP design. Is anything possible with Sigma?

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