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Cloud Atomic Laboratory Blog Post: Why RISC-V?

By January 1, 2019May 12th, 2021No Comments

You might have noticed me tweeting a bunch about RISC-V in recent months. It is actually something I have been following for several years now, since the formation of LowRISC in Cambridge quite some time ago, but this year has suddenly seen a huge maturing of the ecosystem.
In case you have been sitting under a rock hacking on something for some time, RISC-V is an open instruction set for CPUs. It is pronounced “risk five”. It looks a bit like MIPS, if you know your instruction sets, and yes it is very RISC, pretty minimal really. It is designed to be cleanly extended, and has 32, 64 and 128 bit implementations. So far the 32 bit version is for microcontrollers, the 64 bit for operating systems like Linux with MMUs, and the 128 bit version is for future dreams.
 
To read more, please visit: https://www.cloudatomiclab.com/risc-v/.

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