The QUICC ( Quad Integrated Communications Controller ) was a Motorola 68k -based microcontroller made by Freescale Semiconductor , targeted at the telecommunications market. It lends its name to a family of successor chips called PowerQUICC .
4-639: The original QUICC was the Motorola 68360 (MC68360), based on the MC68302. It was followed by the PowerPC -based PowerQUICC I, PowerQUICC II, PowerQUICC II+ and PowerQUICC III. QUICC chips form the core of many Motorola Cellular Base stations. Many PowerQUICC II+ designs now have SATA controllers for SAN based applications. PowerQUICC CPUs/boards come with a Linux environment. Freescale also offers MQX (a RTOS ) for PPC. This article related to telecommunications
8-437: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Motorola 68360 The Freescale 683xx (formerly Motorola 683xx ) is a family of compatible microcontrollers by Freescale that use a Motorola 68000 -based CPU core. The family was designed using a hardware description language , making the parts synthesizable, and amenable to improved fabrication processes, such as die shrinks. There are two CPU cores used in
12-449: The 683xx family: the 68EC000 and the CPU32. The instruction set of the CPU32 core is similar to the 68020 without bitfield instructions, and with a few instructions unique to the CPU32 core, such as table lookup and interpolate instructions, and a low-power stop mode. The modules of the microcontroller were designed independently and released as new CPUs could be tested. This process let
16-466: The architects perform "design-ahead" so that when silicon technologies were available, Motorola had designs ready to implement and go to market. Many of these submodules have been carried forward into the Coldfire line of processors. The microcontrollers consist of a series of modules, connected by an internal bus: Other modules available on various processors in the 683xx family are: Motorola announced
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