The FX8010, is a DSP architecture, designed for realtime audio effects, designed by E-mu, around their E-mu 10K1 chip. One key feature of the architecture, is not providing any branching instructions, but rather running the whole program in a sample locked constant loop, i.e. a constant number of instructions is executed per sample. Instructions are given conditional execution flag akin to some RISC processors (notably the ARM), thus providing a constant runtime.
External links
edit- kxProject documentation page - Some documentation available here
- Steve Hoge (1998-09-25). "FX8010 - A DSP Chip Architecture for Audio Effects". emu.com. pp. 1–4. Archived from the original (ps (gz)) on 2014-03-02.
FX8010 is a DSP chip architecture specifically designed for time-domain 3D audio and effects processing.
1-4&rft.pub=emu.com&rft.date=1998-09-25&rft.au=Steve Hoge&rft_id=http://alsa.cybermirror.org/manuals/creative/HOG63.PS.gz&rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:FX8010" class="Z3988"> - Thomas C. Savell (1999). "THE EMU10K1 DIGITAL AUDIO PROCESSOR" (PDF). IEEE. pp. 1–9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-03-02.1-9&rft.pub=IEEE&rft.date=1999&rft.au=Thomas C. Savell&rft_id=http://alsa.cybermirror.org/manuals/creative/m2049.pdf&rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:FX8010" class="Z3988">