Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!think.com!spool.mu.edu!rex!ames!haven.umd.edu!umbc3.umbc.edu!brian From: brian@umbc3.umbc.edu (Brian Cuthie) Newsgroups: comp.dsp Subject: Re: Gabriel (sp?) DSP Code Message-ID: <1991May25.155002.4370@umbc3.umbc.edu> Date: 25 May 91 15:50:02 GMT Article-I.D.: umbc3.1991May25.155002.4370 References: <1991May21.154348.10003@jvnc.net> <1991May21.161035.10123@jvnc.net> <1991May23.155504.11482@agate.berkeley.edu> Organization: Univ. of Maryland Baltimore County, Academic Computing Services Lines: 19 In article <1991May23.155504.11482@agate.berkeley.edu> phil@east.Berkeley.EDU (Phil Lapsley) writes: >Steve Jaffe (and other interested people): > >Gabriel is a block diagram programming environment for DSP developed here >at Berkeley. It can simulate block diagram DSP designs, generate assembly >code for the Motorola DSP56000 and DSP96000 processors, and automatically >perform parallel scheduling if multiple processors are available. It's not >public domain, although it is distributed free via FTP to Internet sites or >for about $200 on tape, once you sign some license agreements. It runs on >Sun 3s and Sun 4s running SunOS 4.0.3, 4.1, or 4.1.1, and requires X windows >to be used in its full configuration. Has anyone ported this code to the NeXT machine ? This seems like a natural since each and every one has a 56K embedded within it. -brian