Also known as DSP
specialized microprocessor optimized for digital signal processing in real time, mainly used for audio and/or video applications
via Wikidata · CC0
An L7A1045 DSP chip, as used in several Akai samplers and the Hyper Neo Geo 64 arcade board The NeXTcube from 1990 had a Motorola 68040 (25 MHz) and a Motorola 56001 digital signal processor (also 25 MHz), which was directly accessible via an interface.
A digital signal processor (DSP) is a specialized microprocessor chip, with its architecture optimized for the operational needs of digital signal processing. DSPs are fabricated on metal–oxide–semiconductor (MOS) integrated circuit chips. They are widely used in audio signal processing, telecommunications, digital image processing, radar, sonar and speech recognition systems, and in common consumer electronic devices such as mobile phones, disk drives and high-definition television (HDTV) products.
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).