Architectural platform is ideal for AI at the Edge

06-08-2024 | Sondrel | Semiconductors

Sondrel has optimised its SFA 100 to make it ideal for battery-powered, AI at the Edge applications. The SFA 100 is one of the five architectural platforms in the company’s Architecting the Future chip design platform, which supplies a ready-made design baseline that the company uses to build a bespoke solution for every customer much faster than starting from scratch each time.

“The drive to AI everywhere was clear at this year’s CES,” said John Chubb, Sondrel’s CEO. “It enables companies to create better, more feature-rich products but augmenting with AI is not a simple task. It requires much more powerful processor cores than a standard version of a device to handle the large amounts of data involved which can’t just be added onto an existing design. It requires a design from scratch to make sure that the right processors, memory, DSPs, NoC and other components all fit together against the target Power, Performance, Area and Timing specifications.

“This is where our Architecting the Future approach can save a significant amount of time and engineering effort. We don’t start from scratch every time, as we use existing, proven blocks and layouts. By using one of our pre-defined starting architectures, such as the SFA 100, we can rapidly tailor this to create a unique, custom solution for each customer. Effectively we are re-using a framework or chassis and scalable entities such as cores that we have used before along with tools, flows, project management, etc., which reduces risk and, most importantly, time to silicon so that the customer can be fast to market with the AI empowered device.”

The SFA 100 uses an Arm subsystem with a choice of Arm cores and the option of a security subsystem. Its low power requirement makes it the ideal platform for battery-powered Edge AI applications such as smart homes, smart factories, and sensor fusion devices. The device provides the ability to integrate a machine-learning engine supporting various inference-based ‘smarts’ such as voice activation, image classification, gesture recognition, filtering, etc. If required, a radio subsystem, such as a Bluetooth IP block or Wi-Fi, can also be added. The customer’s IP and any third-party IP can be included, as the company can wrap IP blocks so that they have all the necessary interfaces to just drop onto the chassis. More powerful solutions can be created using the SFA 200 or SFA 300 as starting points.

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By Seb Springall

Seb Springall is a seasoned editor at Electropages, specialising in the product news sections. With a keen eye for the latest advancements in the tech industry, Seb curates and oversees content that highlights cutting-edge technologies and market trends.