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Texas Instruments Incorporated
Domeniu: Semiconductors
Number of terms: 7260
Number of blossaries: 0
Company Profile:
Texas Instruments (TI) designs and manufactures analog and digital semiconductor IC products for the world market. In addition to analog technologies, digital signal processing (DSP) and microcontroller (MCU) semiconductors, TI designs and manufactures semiconductor solutions for analog and digital ...
A register that holds one of the operands for a multiply operation; the dynamic bit position for the BITT instruction; or the dynamic shift count for the LACT, ADDT, and SUBT instructions.
Industry:Semiconductors
Common object file format. A binary object file format that promotes modular programming by supporting the concept of sections.
Industry:Semiconductors
The offset into a FIFO memory device that determines when FIFO flags get set or cleared.
Industry:Semiconductors
A defined rectangular area of virtual space on the display.
Industry:Semiconductors
A register that holds serial data received from the serial data receive (DR) pin. See also data receive register (DRR).
Industry:Semiconductors
A form of digital logic that is characterized by low power consumption, wide power supply range, and high noise immunity.
Industry:Semiconductors
The on-chip RAM that is associated with a particular parallel processor in a multimedia video processor (MVP).
Industry:Semiconductors
A design technique for reducing the effective propagation delay per operation by partitioning the operation into a series of stages, each of which performs a portion of the operation. A series of data is typically clocked through the pipeline in sequential fashion, advancing one stage per clock period.
Industry:Semiconductors
A register that holds serial data received from the time-division multiplexed (TDM) data (TDAT) line. See also TDM data receive register (TRCV).
Industry:Semiconductors
Compressed and expanded. A quantization scheme for audio signals in which the input signal is compressed and then, after processing, is reconstructed at the output by expansion. There are two distinct companding schemes—A-law, used in Europe, and -law, used in the United States.
Industry:Semiconductors