The PXA27x also operates at a higher clock rate than its predecessors.
While older PXA2xx family members operated at a maximum clock rate of
400 MHz, the PXA27x operates at up to 624 MHz. The combination of
higher parallelism and higher clock rate makes the PXA27x
significantly faster than its predecessors: based on an analysis of
BDTImark2000™ scores, the 624 MHz PXA270 is over two times faster
than the 400 MHz PXA255 on signal processing tasks. (See
http://www.BDTI.com/bdtimark/BDTImark2000.htm for these and other
benchmark scores.)
The PXA27x also offers expanded memory integration. First, the PXA27x
adds 256 Kbytes of level-two SRAM to the 66 Kbytes of cache memory
found on earlier PXA2xx family members. The PXA27x also expands the
amount of “stacked” memory. Earlier PXA2xx family members contained
up to 32 Mbytes of flash memory stacked with the processor in a
multi-chip package. In comparison, the PXA271 contains both 32 Mbytes
of stacked flash and 32 Mbytes of stacked SDRAM, and the PXA272
contains 64 Mbytes of stacked flash. The PXA27x also provides a
richer set of on-chip peripheral interfaces than its predecessors.
For example, the PXA27x adds a camera interface that can connect to a
variety of CMOS and CCD cameras.
According to Intel, the PXA270 will operate at up to 624 MHz, while
other PXA27x family members will operate at up to 520 MHz. The 312
MHz PXA270 costs $32.00 in 10,000-unit quantities. As of this
writing, pricing for the other family members was not available. All
versions of the PXA27x are available in sample quantities now.
According to Intel, the PXA27x will enter full production this
quarter.