
The newer PSoC 3 8-bit architecture is based on the Intel 8051 architecture. It is still available but is quickly being superceeded by the 8051 PSoC 3. It used a flexible proprietary architecture.

PSoC 1 is the original 8-bit microcontroller of the PSoC family. In addition to a selection of configurable peripherals, Cypress provides three base microcontroller architectures designated PSoC 1, PSoC 3, and PSoC 5. The number of digital and analog blocks vary depending upon the chip. Nordic added this summary for nRF Connect SDK 2.1.Cypress Semiconductor's PSoC is a neat family of microcontrollers that incorporate FPGA-like flexibility when it comes to peripherals.Įssentially each chip comes with a run-time configurable set of digital and analog peripherals.
PSOC SOFTWARE FULL
On the other hand, our Matter over Wi-Fi solution features several experimental components which will be raised from experimental to full support when the nRF7002 enters volume production. Though, all underlying components needed to create a Matter over Thread device feature full production maturity level.īecause Matter SDK and nRF Connect SDK are both projects released on github (as nRF Connect SDK 2.1.0 already uses the same API as Matter SDK v1.0.0) it is a straightforward operation for an nRF Connect SDK 2.1.0 user to use a newer version of the Matter SDK which was tagged as 1.0.0 and is no longer experimental -no need for any alignment between Matter SDK v1.0.0 and underlying SW modules present in nRF Connect SDK 2.1.0.Īdditionally, as we have mentioned, Nordic will soon release an nRF Connect SDK 2.1.x to provide a native integration of Matter SDK v1.0.0. Each of them may be at varying degrees of maturity.īecause we released nRF Connect SDK 2.1.0 a couple of weeks before an official adoption of Matter 1.0, a Matter SDK version which has been integrated into nRF Connect SDK 2.1.0 is still experimental, however it already has a final API and provides all functionalities defined by Matter 1.0. Update: Electronics Weekly asked Nordic to clarify the status of the components discussed above, and product manager Krzysztof Loska replied (also see table below) :Ī Matter solution consist of few components: the Matter application layer itself but also an underlying wireless networking stack (Thread or Wi-Fi) and a hardware platform.
PSOC SOFTWARE BLUETOOTH
It uses a common application layer and data model, and runs on Wi-Fi, Thread and Ethernet network layers, while using Bluetooth LE for commissioning. Matter is a connectivity standard with a common language, intended to allow inter-operability between several wireless standards. “The certification can easily be inherited by the company’s customers for their own products,” it said. Thread 1.3 is a prerequisite for Matter over Thread, said Nordic, which has already certified the SDK to Thread 1.3.


Matter over Wi-Fi will be raised from experimental to full support when the nRF7002 enters volume production.”
PSOC SOFTWARE UPDATE
“This support allows developers to get started immediately on Matter over Thread development using Nordic’s nRF52840 and nRF5340 SoCs.”įor administrative reasons, said the company, Matter over Thread v1.0 support is rated as ‘experimental’ – and the SDK also has experimental support for Matter over Wi-Fi for the nRF5340 when combined with the nRF7002 Wi-Fi 6 companion IC.īeyond SDK v2.1.0, an update is in the pipeline with “bugfixes and small improvements in Matter over Thread” as well as to remove an experimental status associated with Matter over Thread, said Nordic. “Customers can continue using SDK nRF 2.1.0 to conform to the Matter 1.0 specification following some minor manual updates. “This support is related to the Connectivity Standard Alliance’s formal adoption of Matter specification version 1.0,” according to the company.
