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Embedded Systems

Multiple cameras to feature in cars

Cars containing multiple cameras will be on the market in the next three to four years, according to the semiconductor industry. “I have been in contact with every German automotive system manufacturer and every German car manufacturer and everyone is working on something connected with cameras,” said Peter Lieberwirth general manager of the automotive segment at Toshiba Electronics, Europe, “and ...

UK passport spec imminent

The Government is about to release the specification for its e-passport chip. “We will be rolling out e-passports from the end of the year and our offices will be issuing them by the end of the second quarter next year,” said a spokesman for the Passport Office. Last week the German government announced Philips as the lead system provider for ...

PVR is huge consumer success

Demand for personal video recorder (PVR) products increased tremendously during the past year, as unit shipments rose from 4.6 million in 2003 to over 11.4 million in 2004. This is according to In-Stat, which said the demand stems from increased consumer awareness about the concept of time-shifting television programming. Both pay-TV service providers and PVR product manufacturers are reaping the ...

Protocom shrinks quality video

Mini camcorders and portable digital video recorders are just a few of the applications Protocom Technology has in mind for the most recent device out of its labs. The Californian company’s GoldenReel PR818S MPEG4-ASP device will provide the processing power behind Samsung’s new Miniket Mega 4-in-1 memory-based camcorder. The Samsung device offers features including PC/Internet and MP3 capabilities and flash ...

Philips, Microsoft link products

Philips and Microsoft have announced non-exclusive agreements to connect PCs with Nexperia-based products. Philips plans to support Microsoft Windows Media Audio and Video and Windows Media Digital Rights Management 10 (DRM) technology in its Nexperia ICs for use in digital media receivers, personal video recorders, portable audio players, IP set-top boxes and video phones. “By supporting Windows Media technology in ...

Philips, Freescale jump on FlexRay

Philips and Freescale have agreed to share technologies they have developed for FlexRay, the next-generation high-speed automotive bus standard. The companies will use a common protocol engine, and a common SystemC-based reference software model. Although FlexRay is an open standard, Ross McOuat, European automotive MCU marketing manager for Freescale, said that customers are concerned its complexity will lead to problems ...

MontaVista takes on OS giants

MontaVista Software is set to take on the might of Symbian and Microsoft as it moves to drive Linux further into use as an operating system (OS) in mobile phones with the launch of the Mobilinux Open Framework programme. The programme is intended as a means of bringing semiconductor firms, mobile software and phone integrators together to create reference architectures ...

Low power radio for in-body medicine

Cambridge Consultants has designed an intelligent radio transceiver architecture claimed to have a new level of power economy and performance for in-body medical diagnostic and therapeutic applications. “Combined with the opportunities offered by the MICS frequency allocation – which is emerging as a worldwide standard endorsed by the FCC and ETSI – we see great demand for an optimised single-chip ...

Microsoft, Wind River square off

The battle for operating system dominance in the embedded world is heating up as markets formerly driven by other industries such as corporate IT or industrial applications come increasingly under the purview of consumer demand. With almost every device now requiring connection to the Internet and pervasive concerns such as power management, that has pulled Microsoft and Wind River into ...

Embedded OS markets collide

A battle for dominance in the embedded operating system world is gaining steam, pitting Wind River on one side and Microsoft on the other. Until now, these two companies have existed largely in separate worlds. But as a number of end markets continue to converge and Wind River has repositioned its business away from a heavy telecoms focus, both are ...