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UMall1's avatar
UMall1
Icon for Occasional Contributor rankOccasional Contributor
2 years ago

F series vs D series for Cameras

I am considering switching to the F or the D series for my next camera build. Which series is better for a camera? I am looking for something that will rival the Zynq MPSoC EV from Xilinx. I would like something that has video centric features and will be in production for a decade. When will the two series be available at the distributors in chip form (they are already available in eval board format).

4 Replies

  • WZ2's avatar
    WZ2
    Icon for Frequent Contributor rankFrequent Contributor

    Sorry for the delay due to public holidays. I will solve your issue ASAP~

    Thanks for your understanding~

    Best regards,


  • WZ2's avatar
    WZ2
    Icon for Frequent Contributor rankFrequent Contributor

    Hi there,

    For more specific, what interface u will used for your camera~


    • UMall1's avatar
      UMall1
      Icon for Occasional Contributor rankOccasional Contributor

      The Sensor to FPGA interface is MIPI. FPGA to Host Computer Interface is USB3 or (10Ge - 40Ge). I want a Chipset that will be supported for the next 10 years. This camera will be for a computer vision application. Therefore, a system that is optimized for CV implementation is highly desirable. I am looking for low-cost solutions to H.264/265 engines as well.

      Have you ever implemented a FPGA (SOC) + GPU solution?

    • UMall1's avatar
      UMall1
      Icon for Occasional Contributor rankOccasional Contributor

      The Sensor to FPGA interface is MIPI. FPGA to Host Computer Interface is USB3 or (10Ge - 40Ge). I want a Chipset that will be supported for the next 10 years. This camera will be for a computer vision application. Therefore, a system that is optimized for CV implementation is highly desirable. I am looking for low-cost solutions to H.264/265 engines as well.

      Have you ever implemented a FPGA (SOC) + GPU solution?