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The XCode 4210 (right), claimed to "set a new benchmark in application and communications processing," boasts three application processors: one MIPS 74K core and two ARC 750D cores (see later in this story for background). Collectively, these provide performance in excess of 3,200 DMIPS (Dhrystone MIPS), along with networked data throughput over 400 Mbit/sec., according to ViXS.ViXS says each of the XCode 4210's application processors runs its own RTOS (real time operating system) simultaneously. The MIPS core, meanwhile, runs Linux 2.6.28, and later this year, support will be extended to Windows CE, Android, and Adobe's Flash 10.1 software, says the company.
"Specifically designed for 3D TV applications," the XCode 4210 includes full 3D TV display formatting capability, 2D/3D graphics rendering, and support for the H.264 MVC (multi-view codec) 3D TV decoding standard [PDF link, here], ViXS says. It's said the SoC's OpenGL ES 2.0 3D graphics engine provides 1080p graphics rendering on multiple overlays/surfaces, while advanced video processing capabilities include de-interlacing and scaling, edge adaptive sharpening, contrast enhancement, and noise reduction.
According to ViXS, the XCode 4210 can decode, encode, or transcode up to two HD streams, supporting 1080p video at up to 60 frames per second. Using sophisticated algorithms, the SoC can dynamically switch between a full decode re-encode approach and highly efficient smart transcoding, the company says.
ViXS says that as well as supporting 1080p60/50, the XCode 4210 has a 1080p30/25/24 decoder that supports picture in picture and the H.264 SVC (scalable video coding) standard. The device is said to decode "multiple internet formats" and stream, download, or sideload to connected consumer entertainment devices, such as PCs, TVs, game consoles, DLNA clients, and wired or wireless phones.
An available Xtensiv software suite for the XCode 4210 is said to include:
Background
According to MIPS, its 74K core (below) can run at up to 1.1GHz, offering 2.0 DMIPS/MHz. Offered with or without floating point support, the 74K has a superscalar asymmetric dual-issue pipeline with out-of-order dispatch and completion. The core allows user-defined instruction set extensions ("CoreExtend") and works with a robust set of development tools including CodeSourcery, the company adds.


ARC's 750D (above), meanwhile, is said to clock at up to 700MHz while providing a configurable memory architecture. According to ARC, the core provides floating point instructions, DSP extensions that accelerate signal processing, and, once again, user-defined extensions.
Further information
Toronto-based ViXS did not provide pricing, availability details, or specifications such as size and power consumption, but says the XCode 4210 will be showcased later this month at the IPTV World Forum in London. Further details of the device may eventually appear on the company's website, here.