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You have to understand where it came from, if you want to understand where it's going - that's old school.
"Analog is Everywhere" runs the advertisement of a well-known chip manufacturer that years ago employed several of our principals as Field Applications Engineers.
There's rarely such a thing as a purely digital circuit anymore, since the speeds of buses have increased to the point that everything is ultimately being examined for its risetime or eye pattern. And the world remains an analog beast: if you're going to interact with it, sooner or later you'll have to meet it on its own terms.
To help you in this, We will:
At Focus Embedded, analog is nothing new. Our team members have been putting together analog circuits since the days when they accounted for the vast majority of new designs.
True, we do SPICE modeling. If you need statistical analyses of your circuit, complete with a fallout calculation for component variation, we can build the model that guarantees that the 100,000th circuit board runs just as well as the first. And if you have an existing board that's failing, we can dive into that analysis as well.
More importantly, though, we can find closed-form solutions to problems with nothing more than pencil, paper, and higher mathematics. Good design isn't about having the computer technology to generate incorrect answers more quickly than a human can spot them; it's about understanding what's going on at a fundamental level and building the correct model in the first place.
We've been doing analog design work long enough that we're aware which components are non-ideal and which of their parasitic effects can impact system performance. When it matters that an inductor is also partially a capacitor and partially a resistor, we'll be aware. When Johnson noise is enough to affect a measurement in a highly sensitive instrumentation amplifier, we'll find it and ferret it out – or describe it so accurately mathematically that software can spot it easily to remove it later. And when the copper traces on a PCB become very much a part of the circuit, we'll know.
We've designed power management circuitry, so we know how to keep things green by matching complex impedances properly (and doing so dynamically if the source or load is a moving target).
Because we do circuit design, embedded software design, and programmable device design, we'll be able to tell you where you need one and where you can very likely do as well or better (possibly for much lower cost) with one of the others. Getting back and forth between "s" and "z" domains means doing the old-school math to which we're accustomed. Presuming one to be the preferred solution because it's all you know is a formula for missing better alternatives.
We have some rare talents at Focus Embedded, who can find an analog problem — and provide an elegantsolution — before you go to market.
+1 (512) 246-9012
1-888-FOC-7924
info@focusembedded.com
Austin, TX 78727 USA