Home    Bloggers    Messages    Webinars    Resources   
Tw  |  Fb  |  In  |  Rss
Comments
Newest First | Oldest First | Threaded View
Göran
Göran
8/21/2012 4:08:58 AM
User Rank
Expert
Marss Rover
Not sure if this is known or not but MicroBlaze is now on Mars.

In the Mars Rover Curiosity there is a module called DEA (Digital Electronics Assembly) which interface to the cameras.

The core of the DEA is a Xilinx VirtexII and inside there is a MicroBlaze which handles all the interfaces.

source http://www-robotics.jpl.nasa.gov/publications/Reg_Willson/Edgett_etal_MAHLI_7Jul2012published.pdf  (page 23)

 

Göran

50%
50%
Paul A. Clayton
Paul A. Clayton
6/26/2012 11:46:44 AM
User Rank
Beginner
50%
50%
Göran
Göran
6/25/2012 9:50:49 AM
User Rank
Expert
Re: Skunk Works
Hej Sven-Åke,

 

Nice article :-)

I sometimes google on MicroBlaze and found this blog from our old CEO Wim Roelandts.

http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2012/06/fixing_the_malaise_in_us_high.html

Where he mention early days of MicroBlaze.

 

Göran

50%
50%
svenand
svenand
6/21/2012 3:46:49 PM
User Rank
Blogger
Re: Skunk Works
Talking about skunk works. During my time at Ericsson I developed a number of CAD programs called the Zoo Design Platform. It was a big skunk work from start to end.

 

 

50%
50%
EdV
EdV
6/21/2012 2:35:03 PM
User Rank
Guru
50%
50%
Max Maxfield
Max Maxfield
6/21/2012 2:17:04 PM
User Rank
Blogger
Re: Skunk Works
@ab6vu: "Obviously, these are my own opinions, and may or may not be those of any employer I have ever worked for ...."

Ah, the "Weasel Words" (grin). As the old saying goes, "Eagles may soar, but weasels rarely get sucked into jet engines" :-)


50%
50%
Max Maxfield
Max Maxfield
6/21/2012 2:13:59 PM
User Rank
Blogger
Re: Bending The Rules
@EdV: 'There are few admonitions more inviting to ignore than "don't use those tools over there."'

How about "Don not press this button!"


 

 

50%
50%
ab6vu
ab6vu
6/21/2012 1:37:54 PM
User Rank
Guru
Re: Skunk Works
One could say that in the early days of Silicon Valley, the most successful companies all followed the procedures called out for 'skunk works.'

 

One important aspect of a skunk, is that it is not pleasant, but it definitely gets the job done.  Having had a nest of skunks sneek into my house 2 years ago, and set up residence next to the furnace led to a frightful evening where the house was uninhabitable for more than a month, and required serious (chemical enzyme) de-skunking ....


Successful companies today often have internal groups that operate with similar procedures.  If the secret project fails, the investors don't hear about it (the smell eventually goes away but it makes a statement, internally).  if it succeeds, then everyone is happy (and perhaps lives to work another day).

To make great discoveries implies an environment where mistakes can, an will, be made, and they are not punished.

The 'rule' should be: never make the same mistake, ever.  But if you fire everyone on the first mistake, your result is a totally incompetent organization, that lives in fear.

Obviously, these are my own opinions, and may or may not be those of any employer I have ever worked for ....

50%
50%
EdV
EdV
6/21/2012 1:21:58 PM
User Rank
Guru
Bending The Rules
There are few admonitions more inviting to ignore than "don't use those tools over there." Surely if I use the tools during my lunch break that isn't the same thing as "really" using them.  I'm just making sure I am staying current with the trending paradigm(s).  I think Thomas Edison may have had a similar experience inventing the stock ticker.  I will have to revisit that story.

50%
50%
Max Maxfield
Max Maxfield
6/21/2012 11:37:11 AM
User Rank
Blogger
Skunk Works
@Sven -- this is very interesting -- I had no idea about any of this. On point, it might be a good idea to explain the term "Skunk Works" for our readers from around the world. A quick search on the web reveals the following:

---------------------

A skunkworks (also known as Skunk Works) is a small group of people who work on a project in an unconventional way. The group's purpose is to develop something quickly with minimal management constraints. Skunkworks are often used to initially roll out a product or service that thereafter will be developed according to usual business processes.

The term skunkworks was first introduced during World War II by engineers at Lockheed Corporation (which, in 1995, merged with Martin Marietta to become the Lockheed Martin Corporation). The engineers, who were tasked with building a fighter jet for the United States Government, operated under an unconventional organizational approach developed by Clarence L. "Kelly" Johnson. His directives for how the skunkworks should operate are called The 14 Practices and Rules.

----------------------

You can find out more here http://bit.ly/LEYYQF

50%
50%


latest blogs
The appellation "primary colors" refers to a small collection of colors that can be combined to form a range of additional colors, but which "small collection of colors" should we use as our primaries?
Today's FPGAs already integrate a substantial amount of "stuff" (MCU cores, programmable fabric, on-chip memory, etc.), so what's left to integrate and why is this being left for the future?
To celebrate Geek Pride Day, Sylvie Barak has created a mega-cool infographic that depicts how geeks have been building the Internet since 1832.
When traversing serial links with optics or backplanes, high-speed signals are degraded by impairments in the link, such as insertion loss, reflections, crosstalk, and optical dispersion.
Can statistical or heuristic verification really work for FPGA designs?
flash poll
follow us on twitter
follow Xilinx on twitter
like us on facebook
like Xilinx on facebook
All Programmable Planet     About Us     Contact Us     Help     Register     Twitter     Facebook     RSS