Altera in portable entertainment
Design more features before the next re-spin
with Altera PLDs
Your customers demand light-weight mobility and more functionality
than ever before. Not only do you have to design all the latest features
into your products, but you have to do it in an ever-smaller board space,
use less power, and integrate into a wide array of other technologies to
stay ahead of the curve. Whether you’re designing for media players,
edutainment toys, handheld games, GPS navigators, or another portable
device, Altera delivers flexible programmable solutions that will get you
to market faster and reduce your total cost of development.
Altera in portable media players
A new generation of portable media players is here. Altera® solutions make it easy for you to deliver
all the functionality this new generation demands. Your customers will be able to listen to music,
watch videos, and view pictures, functionality that’s integrated into one product that they can carry in
the palm of their hand. Envision the future with wireless media sharing, image and video capture, and
gaming capabilities. Because Altera is at the forefront of portable media player design, we’ll be able to
help you deliver these kind of features and more, only faster.
The MAX® II device helps us stay
competitive in the extremely price-
sensitive consumer electronics
market. We have been able to
implement digital signal processing
more economically than with
alternative solutions and reduce
costs at the manufacturing level
Mike Chai
Senior Vice President of R&D
LeapFrog
Altera
Optional Interfaces
Video
codec
Radio IC
DTV Tuner
External
memory card
interface
Mic, audio line in
Video in
Smart card
interface
Power
management
HDD
interface
HDD
DRAM flash
I
2
C
expansion
port
Optical
interface
MPEG TS
interface
TO S LINK
To DVR
Image
processing
controller
Audio
codec
DTV: digital television
HDD: hard disk drive
Portable media player example
In a typical portable media
player system, the central
functional block is the image
processing controller. The
basic functions required for
the image processing controller
can be implemented either in
an ASIC, ASSP, or DSP device.
A companion Altera program-
mable logic device (PLD) can
also be incorporated into the
basic design for feature
enhancements. Because PLDs
are reprogrammable, this
companion device allows you
to differentiate products and
get them to market faster than
designers who use ASICs,
ASSPs, or DSP devices alone.
Altera Corporation
101 Innovation Drive
San Jose, CA 95134
USA
Telephone: (408) 544-7000
www.altera.com
Altera European Headquarters
Holmers Farm Way
High Wycombe
Buckinghamshire
HP12 4XF
United Kingdom
Telephone: (44) 1494 602000
Altera Japan Ltd.
Shinjuku i-Land Tower 32F
6-5-1, Nishi-Shinjuku
Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 163-1332
Japan
Telephone: (81) 3 3340 9480
www.altera.co.jp
Altera International Ltd.
2102 Tower 6
The Gateway, Harbour City
9 Canton Road
Tsimshatsui Kowloon
Hong Kong
Telephone: (852) 2945 7000
www.altera.com.cn
Copyright © 2007 Altera Corporation. All rights reserved. Altera, The Programmable Solutions Company, the stylized Altera logo, specific device designations, and all other words and
logos that are identified as trademarks and/or service marks are, unless noted otherwise, the trademarks and service marks of Altera Corporation in the U.S. and other countries. All other
product or service names are the property of their respective holders. Altera products are protected under numerous U.S. and foreign patents and pending applications, mask work
rights, and copyrights. Altera warrants performance of its semiconductor products to current specifications in accordance with Altera’s standard warranty, but reserves the right to make
changes to any products and services at any time without notice. Altera assumes no responsibility or liability arising out of the application or use of any information, product, or service
described herein except as expressly agreed to in writing by Altera. Altera customers are advised to obtain the latest version of device specifications before relying on any published
information and before placing orders for products or services. April 2007; 2,500.
SS-01013-1.0
Altera in edutainment toys
Educating children while keeping them entertained is the
objective of portable edutainment toys. In a typical portable
edutainment toy system, the central functional block is the
signal conditioning controller. The signal conditioning
controller positions the motor, based on inputs from an
external sensor. It processes and loads images to the display
panel, handles audio processing functions, such as audio tone
synthesis, and manages external audio sources. These three
functions are unique to an edutainment toy system specifica-
tion, and a PLD gives you maximum design flexibility, low
risk, and fastest time to market in your designs. Similar to the
portable media player application, PLDs are ideal for interface
bridging, I/O expansion, power management, voltage-level
shifting, DSP configuration, and clock generation functions.
Portable edutainment toy example
Motor
driver
Audio
driver
Power
management
I
2
C
expansion
port
DRAM
flash
Signal
conditioning
controller
ADC
Camera
interface
MP3
interface
Sensor
inputs
Keyboard
joystick
interface
Altera
Optional Interfaces
ADC: analog-to-digital converter
Visit us at www.altera.com/consumer for more information.
Portable entertainment features and benefits
Functions MAX II
CPLDs
Cyclone
®
Series FPGAs
Features Benefits
Power management
4
Dynamic power management Adapts to application for
optimal power consumption
Video and image processing
4
Abundant memory and multipliers for video processing applications Image processing, quality
enhancement
Signal conditioning controller
4 4
MAX II CPLDs are lower cost than digital signal processors; Cyclone series
FPGAs have configurable soft processor for custom-fit solutions
Cost and board space
reduction
LCD timing controller
4
Built-in LVDS, reduced swing differential signaling (RSDS), mini-LVDS, point-
to-point differential signaling (PPDS) display column driver interfaces
Cost and board space
reduction
Interface bridging
4 4
Configurable I/O buffers with built-in interfaces for common I/O standards
and external memory interfaces
No extra components needed
for interface bridging
General purpose I/O (GPIO)
pin/I
2
C/system port expansion
4
Adding more I/O or system user I/F Flexibility and expandability
at minimal cost, highest I/O
per mm
2 1
Data format conversion
4
High bandwidth memory for fast data format conversion Fast performance, less timing
delay
ASSP-function complement
4 4
Add features to complement ASSP: smart card, game stick I/F Expandability, time to market
Security
4
Store encryption key in User Flash Memory (UFM) Personal content protection
Voltage level shifter
4
On-chip voltage regulator No need for additional voltage
regulator
Clock generation
4 4
MAX II UFM interface clock-sync and power-up sequencing; Cyclone series
phase-locked loops (PLLs) can generate multiple independent clocks from a
single low-cost clock source
Internal clock generation, no
need for additional clock
1
Device using eight 16-bit counters and no outputs switching