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ARM Inc. has provided us with a number of TI Beagleboards
So, a developer program for a freescale product, which gets started thanks to a non-freescale product.
The idea is to get certain developers access to chips which have the NEON vector engine at a more affordable price and on a more stable (i.e. been released) platform. I couldn't even call Beagleboard stable; we got the latest C2 revision boards, if you check the Beagleboard site for the number of changes and weird stuff older boards do and schematic errors, you will get a flavor for why sometimes "right now" is just too early to run a developer program around. We feel the C2 BeagleBoard got mature enough to throw out there to meet a goal we have internally - get people up to speed on NEON.
Hardware projects which require the features of the i.MX515 won't be eligible and we'll "replace" the Beagleboards at some point (in fact a lot of the project submissions are from people who have already successfully completed similar things on a Beagleboard), but remember the i.MX515 is still going through the last stages of development. There are some things you just don't want to expose in a developer program and some problems just waiting a month means we don't have to continually support some weird kernel patch or be shipping a mass update to a BSP.