Tech Papers
Enabling Mobile Multimedia Applications with Bluetooth to UART Bridges
QuickLogic
David Shih and Paul MicallefProduct Paper
February 2004
The QuickLogic 16550 Universal Asynchronous Receiver Transmitter (UART) core and Eclipse Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) can provide the required backend infrastructure to design and build these mobile wireless devices. The UART core is software-compatible with systems designed for the 16550 UART interface.
QuickLogic Eclipse FPGAs have programmable Input/Output (I/O) standards to interface to a wide range of systems. Eclipse devices have configurable dual-port Static Random Access Memory (SRAM) blocks that can implement on-chip Random Access Memory (RAM), Read Only Memory (ROM), and First In First Out (FIFO). Eclipse also features embedded arithmetic units that can accelerate local data processing. Furthermore, Eclipse's non-volatile technology makes it powerefficient, fast, and smallcharacteristics demanded by mobile Bluetooth devices.




