Curated by THEOUTPOST
On Fri, 8 Nov, 12:03 AM UTC
2 Sources
[1]
MIPS releases RISC-V CPU for autonomous vehicles
Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More MIPS released its P8700 CPU based on the RISC-V computing architecture to target driver assistance and autonomous vehicle applications. The San Jose, California-based company, which focuses on developing efficient and configurable intellectual property compute, licenses its designs to other chip makers. Today, it is announcing the general availability launch of the MIPS P8700 Series RISC-V Processor. Designed to meet the low-latency, highly intensive data movement demands of the most advanced automotive applications such as ADAS (advanced driver assistance system) and autonomous vehicles, the P8700 delivers accelerated compute, power efficiency and scalability, said Sameer Wasson, CEO of MIPS, in an interview with VentureBeat. "Automotive is a big segment where we focus. It continues being a very exciting place. Some companies came and some disappeared," Wasson said. "They lost interest. They came out of COVID and refilled their inventory. But what's happening in the industry right now is very interesting. I think autonomy is now coming back to that steady growth rate." He added, "It is one of the biggest driving forces to continue innovating in terms of bringing better solutions. If you think about the solutions today, most of the deployments in vehicles are driven by what used to be vehicle technology. That was basic microcontrollers, simple stuff. They could open and close doors, run internal combustion engines. As autonomy grows, you're going to see compute needs evolve toward more AI network compute. That allows you to have higher levels of autonomy." "We have technology and we have a play in making it much more mainstream than it has been," he said. Typical solutions for ADAS and autonomous driving rely on a brute-force approach of embedding a higher number of cores at higher clock rates driving synthetic, albeit unrealistic and unrealized performance. The P8700 with its multi-threaded and power-efficient architecture allows MIPS customers to implement fewer CPU cores and much lower thermal design power (TDP) than the current market solutions, thereby allowing OEMs to develop ADAS solutions in an affordable and highly scalable manner. It also mitigates the system bottlenecks of data movement inefficiency by providing highly efficient, optimized and lower power latency sensitive solution specifically tailored for interrupt laden multi-sensor platforms. "If you look at the RISC-V space overall, I think these spaces are ready for disruption, with a chance for new architectures coming in," Wasson said. "Otherwise, EVs will be much more expensive than they need to be." For Level 2 or higher ADAS systems with AI Autonomous software stack, the MIPS P8700 can also offload core processing elements that cannot be easily quantized in deep learning and reduced by sparsity-based convolution processing functions, resulting in a greater than 30% better AI Stack software utilization and efficiency. "The automotive market demands CPUs which can process a large amount of data from multiple sensors in real-time and feed the AI Accelerators to process in an efficient manner," said Wasson. "The MIPS Multi-threading and other architectural hooks tailored for automotive applications, make it a compelling core for data intensive processing tasks. This will enable automotive OEMs to have high performance compute systems which consume less power and better utilize of AI Accelerators." The MIPS P8700 core, featuring multi-core/multi-cluster and multi-threaded CPU IP based on the RISC-V ISA, is now progressing toward series production with multiple major OEMs. Key customers like Mobileye (Nasdaq: MBLY) have embraced this approach for future products for self-driving vehicles and highly automated driving systems. "MIPS has been a key collaborator in our success with the EyeQâ„¢ systems-on-chip for ADAS and autonomous vehicles," said Elchanan Rushinek, executive vice president of engineering for Mobileye, in a statement. "The launch of the MIPS P8700 RISC-V core will help drive our continued development for global automakers, enabling greater performance and excellent efficiency in cost and power usage." The P8700 Series is a high-performance out-of-order processor that implements the RISC-V RV64GC architecture, including new CPU and system-level features designed for performance, power, area form factors and additional proven features built on legacy MIPS micro-architecture deployed in more than 30+ car models today across the global OEM market. Engineered to deliver industry-leading compute density, MIPS' latest processor harnesses three key architectural features, including MIPS out-of-order multi-threading, which enables execution of multiple instructions from multiple threads (harts) every clock cycle, providing higher utilization and CPU efficiency. It also has coherent multi-core, multi-cluster, where the P8700 Series scales up to 6 coherent P8700 cores in a cluster with each cluster supporting direct attach accelerators. And it has functional safety designed to meet the ASIL-B(D) functional safety standard (ISO26262) by incorporating several fault detection capabilities such as end-to-end parity protection on address and data buses, parity protection on software visible registers, fault bus for reporting faults to the system, and more. The MIPS P8700 processor is now available to the broader market, with key partnerships already in place. Shipments with OEM launches are expected shortly. MIPS has been around for three decades and billions of its chips have shipped to date. In the past, Wasson said vendors were using the wrong computer architecture, which was built for entertainment and screen applications, rather than hardcore AI problems. "What we are trying to do is go focus on building compute for ADAS and higher levels of autonomy, from the ground up," he said. Vasanth Waran, worldwide head of business development at MIPS, said in an interview with VentureBeat that other architectures have been pushing performance forward through brute force, adding more complexity and scaling, but not necessarily coming up with affordable designs. "If you want to bring it to a larger market, you want autonomy to be affordable, and you want it to scale," Waran said. "There needs to be a more pure approach, given the lack of a better word, and that's what motivated us. The 8700 from the ground up is where you can move data seamlessly between different parts of a design. If you look at a car, you have a lot of sensors with data coming in, from cameras, radar, LiDAR, in some cases, and the inputs from these need to be processed. It needs to be pushed out to an AI accelerator system. And then that data needs to help you make a decision." MIPS' designs try to offload a lot of the performance from AI accelerators, whether it's in pre-processing or post-processing. With a general-purpose processor, new software can be supported, and such software for AI accelerators is changing all the time. RISC-V has been building up its ecosystem in the past couple of years, and its ecosystem is now at the right size to support applications. "The other big thing that's happening is software defined vehicles. Our products can be used for a holistic software-defined vehicle architecture," Waran said. "We're focused completely on the autonomous journey." Wasson said his company will be at the CES 2025 event coming up in Las Vegas in January, where pitching automakers will be a big task for the company.
[2]
MIPS Releases P8700, Industry's First High-Performance AI-Enabled RISC-V Automotive CPU for ADAS and Autonomous Vehicles By Investing.com
SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--MIPS, a leading developer of efficient and configurable IP compute cores, announced today the general availability (GA) launch of the MIPS P8700 Series RISC-V Processor. Designed to meet the low-latency, highly intensive data movement demands of the most advanced automotive applications such as ADAS and Autonomous Vehicles (AVs), the P8700 delivers industry-leading accelerated compute, power efficiency and scalability Typical solutions for ADAS and autonomous driving rely on a brute-force approach of embedding a higher number of cores at higher clock rates driving synthetic, albeit unrealistic and unrealized performance. The P8700 with its multi-threaded and power-efficient architecture allows MIPS customers to implement fewer CPU cores and much lower thermal design power (TDP) than the current market solutions, thereby allowing OEMs to develop ADAS solutions in an affordable and highly scalable manner. It also mitigates the system bottlenecks of data movement inefficiency by providing highly efficient, optimized and lower power latency sensitive solution specifically tailored for interrupt laden multi-sensor platforms. For L2+ ADAS systems with AI Autonomous software stack, the MIPS P8700 can also offload core processing elements that cannot be easily quantized in deep learning and reduced by sparsity-based convolution processing functions, resulting in >30% better AI Stack software utilization and efficiency. The automotive market demands CPUs which can process a large amount of data from multiple sensors in real-time and feed the AI Accelerators to process in an efficient manner," said Sameer Wasson, CEO of MIPS. The MIPS Multi-threading and other architectural hooks tailored for automotive applications, make it a compelling core for data intensive processing tasks. This will enable Automotive OEMs to have high performance compute systems which consume less power and better utilize AI Accelerators. The MIPS P8700 core, featuring multi-core/multi-cluster and multi-threaded CPU IP based on the RISC-V ISA, is now progressing toward series production with multiple major OEMs. Key customers like Mobileye (Nasdaq: MBLY) have embraced this approach for future products for self-driving vehicles and highly automated driving systems. MIPS has been a key collaborator in our success with the EyeQâ„¢ systems-on-chip for ADAS and autonomous vehicles, said Elchanan Rushinek, executive vice president of engineering for Mobileye. The launch of the MIPS P8700 RISC-V core will help drive our continued development for global automakers, enabling greater performance and excellent efficiency in cost and power usage. The P8700 Series is a high-performance out-of-order processor that implements the RISC-V RV64GC architecture, including new CPU and system-level features designed for performance, power, area form factors and additional proven features built on legacy MIPS micro-architecture deployed in more than 30+ car models today across the global OEM market. Engineered to deliver industry-leading compute density, MIPS' latest processor harnesses three key architectural features, including: The MIPS P8700 processor is now available to the broader market, with key partnerships already in place. Shipments with OEM launches are expected shortly. For more information about the MIPS P8700, please visit https://mips.com/markets/automotive/. About MIPS MIPS is accelerating compute density in the automotive, cloud and embedded markets. Giving customers the freedom to build unique products for specific workloads, MIPS' industry-leading cores are configurable, efficient and easy to implement. Its multi-threading methodology delivers advanced scalability and the ability to efficiently move and process data faster. The company's compute DNA spans three decades with billions of MIPS-based chips shipped to date. For more information, visit www.MIPS.com.
Share
Share
Copy Link
MIPS has launched the P8700 Series RISC-V Processor, designed for advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) and autonomous vehicles. This new CPU promises improved performance, power efficiency, and scalability for the automotive industry.
MIPS, a leading developer of efficient and configurable IP compute cores, has announced the general availability of its P8700 Series RISC-V Processor. This new CPU is specifically designed to meet the demanding requirements of advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) and autonomous vehicles (AVs) 1.
The P8700 boasts several innovative features that set it apart from traditional solutions:
The P8700's architecture offers significant advantages for automotive applications:
The release of the P8700 has garnered attention from major players in the automotive industry:
MIPS CEO Sameer Wasson believes that the RISC-V space is ripe for disruption:
The MIPS P8700 processor is now available to the broader market, with key partnerships already in place. Shipments with OEM launches are expected shortly 12. This development represents a significant step forward in the evolution of autonomous vehicle technology, potentially reshaping the landscape of the automotive industry.
As the demand for more advanced ADAS and autonomous driving capabilities continues to grow, the P8700's innovative approach to compute efficiency and AI acceleration could play a crucial role in driving the next generation of intelligent vehicles.
MIPS, a veteran Silicon Valley company, announces a strategic shift towards designing chips for AI-enabled robots and autonomous vehicles, focusing on three key areas of robotics: sensing, decision-making, and motor control.
3 Sources
3 Sources
SiFive, a leading RISC-V chip designer, has introduced a new AI accelerator chip design aimed at high-performance computing and edge AI applications. The new architecture promises improved efficiency and performance for AI workloads.
3 Sources
3 Sources
Imagination Technologies has announced its latest automotive GPU IP, the IMG CXT-A, boasting the highest performance and advanced functional safety features for next-generation automotive applications.
2 Sources
2 Sources
DeepComputing and Fractile collaborate with Andes Technology to develop groundbreaking RISC-V-based AI hardware, including the world's first RISC-V AI PC and a novel AI inference accelerator, promising significant advancements in AI computing efficiency and performance.
2 Sources
2 Sources
Nvidia's autonomous vehicle platform, DRIVE AGX Hyperion, has passed key industry-safety assessments, setting new standards for AV safety, innovation, and performance. The platform features advanced AI capabilities and is designed for both passenger and commercial vehicles.
2 Sources
2 Sources
The Outpost is a comprehensive collection of curated artificial intelligence software tools that cater to the needs of small business owners, bloggers, artists, musicians, entrepreneurs, marketers, writers, and researchers.
© 2025 TheOutpost.AI All rights reserved