Hi Genesi, regarding your press release...
http://www.genesi-tech.com/press/2013/5/31/
...I was wondering if you could explain the "RCP" concept a bit? It's kind of new to me.
From what I was able to read/understand, it seems to be about packaging a CPU (like the i.MX6) and other things, like memory and small peripheral controllers, on a physical PCB of the size of (or slightly smaller than) a traditional CPU chip?
How do you then utilize this - by putting it on a "motherboard" PCB (like you would do with a CPU chip), or by wiring it directly to the "outer world" I/O connectors in some way?
"RCP System Solutions are anticipated to lower system costs, improve performance and provide a platform that can be modified or upgraded once a system has been deployed."
This sounds like it would be the former, right? This "RCP" would be a "CPU" that from a motherboards point of view would be "pin compatible" with later developments, thus older ones can be pulled out of its "socket" and be replaced with a new "RCP", that perhaps contains a different CPU and upgraded controllers, but that still has an identical pinout scheme so the motherboard/initial system design won't notice or care?
I take it that you as a licensee decides the package contents, or are there pre-designed options you chose from? Do you or Freescale put the thing together? I guess this takes some volume in making this happening...?
All the best!
:-)