Express Logic's ThreadX(R) RTOS Makes Strong Showing On ARM, MIPS and ColdFire Processors In CMP Operating Systems Survey.SAN DIEGO -- Express Logic, Inc., the worldwide leader in royalty-free real-time operating systems (RTOS (1) (RealTime Operating System) An operating system designed for use in a real time computer system. See real time system, embedded system, process control and OS-9. ) with over 300 million deployments, today announced that its ThreadX(R) RTOS scored highly in the 2006 CMP CMP (cytidine monophosphate): see cytosine. (1) (CMP Media LLC, Manhasset, NY, www.cmp.com) Part of United Business Media, CMP is a leading integrated media company that offers a wide variety of publications and services in the information Media "State of Embedded Market Survey," of 1,217 embedded developers. ThreadX ranked especially high among general-purpose, hard real-time operating systems for ARM, MIPS (Million Instructions Per Second) The execution speed of a computer. For example, .5 MIPS is 500,000 instructions per second; 100 MIPS is a hundred million instructions per second. , and ColdFire 32-bit architectures, based on data from the survey, conducted in March, 2006. The CMP survey measured RTOS use through questions posed to a large group of embedded developers, comprised of attendees of the Embedded Systems Conferences, and subscribers to EE Times, Embedded Systems Europe, and Embedded Systems Design publications. A key survey question asked developers, "Which operating system do you currently use?" Results from developers who indicated that they were using 32-bit architectures based on ARM, MIPS, or Freescale's ColdFire responded as shown in the chart at the right. Express Logic's ThreadX RTOS ranked near the top with a 12% average response. The highest-ranking general purpose hard real-time OS was Wind River's VxWorks with a 20% response, followed by ThreadX which ranked #2. Other operating systems that are not considered here as general-purpose hard real-time OSes, such as Red Hat Linux Red Hat Linux, assembled by Red Hat, was a popular, "middle-aged" Linux distribution (not as old as Slackware but older than Ubuntu) upon its discontinuation in 2004.[1] Red Hat Linux 1.0 was released on November 3, 1994. , TI's DSP/BIOS, Microsoft Windows CE and Windows XP Embedded An enhanced version of Windows XP for compact applications such as PDAs, handhelds and other appliances that use the x86 CPU. It supports such features as CompactPCI and the ability to boot from flash memory or CD-ROM. received responses between 13 and 28 percent. The survey shows that ThreadX use among ARM, MIPS, and ColdFire developers is greater than that of many competitive RTOSes, including Nucleus (10%), eCOS (7%), INTEGRITY (5%), and RTXC (2%). In addition, ThreadX outpaced several Linux distributions including Monta Vista Linux (8%), FSM Labs' RT Linux (4%), and LynuxWorks' BlueCat Linux (2%). "These developer survey results show a strong, increasingly successful penetration of ThreadX into the 32-bit embedded systems market," commented John Carbone, vice president of marketing of Express Logic. "ThreadX is gaining in popularity, and is now deployed in over 300 million electronic products worldwide, including HP inkjet printers and digital cameras, Marvell and Broadcom SoCs for wireless networking, and Welch Allyn portable patient monitors. This survey shows that developers are more likely to choose ThreadX than many competing RTOS products." Express Logic's ThreadX RTOS is a small-footprint, fast, royalty-free real-time operating system that is ideal for high volume, resource constrained devices requiring hard real-time responsiveness and fast time to market. ThreadX runs on 32-bit microprocessor architectures from ARM, MIPS, and Freescale, as well as those from ARC, Analog Devices, Altera, AMCC AMCC Applied Micro Circuits Corporation AMCC Air Mobility Control Center AMCC Ashore Mobile Contingency Communications AMCC Advanced Materials Commercialization Center AMCC allied movement coordination center (US DoD) , Renesas, and Xilinx. Shipping and Availability ThreadX is available in full source code form, royalty free, for most popular 32-bit architectures, at license prices starting at $12,500. About Express Logic Headquartered in San Diego, CA, Express Logic offers the most advanced run-time solution for deeply embedded applications, including the popular ThreadX(R) RTOS, the high-performance NetX(TM) TCP/IP stack, the FileX(R) embedded MS-DOS MS-DOS in full Microsoft Disk Operating System Operating system for personal computers. MS-DOS was based on DOS, developed in 1980 by Seattle Computer Products. Microsoft Corp. bought the rights to DOS in 1981, and released MS-DOS with IBM's PC that year. compatible file system, and the USBX(TM) Host/Device USB USB in full Universal Serial Bus Type of serial bus that allows peripheral devices (disks, modems, printers, digitizers, data gloves, etc.) to be easily connected to a computer. protocol stack. All products from Express Logic include full source-code and have no run-time royalties. For more information about Express Logic solutions, please visit www.expresslogic.com, call 1-888-THREADX, or email inquires to sales@expresslogic.com. ThreadX and FileX are registered trademarks, and NetX, CANX CANX Cancel CANX Canceled , USBX, preemption-threshold, picokernel, UDP UDP (uridine diphosphate): see uracil. (User Datagram Protocol) A protocol within the TCP/IP protocol suite that is used in place of TCP when a reliable delivery is not required. fast path technology, are trademarks of Express Logic, Inc. All other brands or product names are the property of their respective holders. |
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