Freescale Opens Licensing of Power Architecture(TM) e200 Core Family Through IPextreme.Agreement Between Two Power.org Members Makes Available Four e200 Cores for System-on-Chip and Application-Specific Designs SAN JOSE San Jose, city, United States San Jose (sănəzā`, săn hōzā`), city (1990 pop. 782,248), seat of Santa Clara co., W central Calif.; founded 1777, inc. 1850. , Calif. -- Extending the reach of Power Architecture[TM] technology in the embedded market Refers to custom-designed, computer-based devices and applications that perform a fixed set of tasks. It may refer to cellphones and other handhelds, network appliances (routers, access points, modems) and myriad consumer electronics products. , Freescale Semiconductor Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. is an American semiconductor manufacturer. It was created by the divestiture of the Semiconductor Products Sector of Motorola in 2004. Freescale focuses their integrated circuit products on the automotive, embedded and communications markets. is licensing its e200 core family to designers of system-on-chip (SoC) devices and application-specific semiconductor products (ASSPs). Freescale will license its e200 cores, which are widely used in the automotive industry The automotive industry is the industry involved in the design, development, manufacture, marketing, and sale of motor vehicles. In 2006, more than 69 million motor vehicles, including cars and commercial vehicles were produced worldwide. , through an agreement with semiconductor intellectual property (IP) licensing specialist IPextreme Inc. Freescale and IPextreme are members of Power.org, the open, collaborative organization that enables, develops and promotes Power Architecture technology. Both companies will be showcasing the e200 core family and licensing model in the Power.org booth (#1216) at the Embedded Systems Conference this week. "Licensing our Power Architecture e200 core family through IPextreme is a watershed development for the industry and our customers," said Paul Grimme, senior vice president and general manager of Freescale's Transportation & Standard Products Group. "This licensing arrangement will help further extend Power Architecture technology within the automotive industry and help to proliferate e200 cores into other markets, such as low-end, low-power embedded network applications. IPextreme is an ideal partner for this initiative because they have successfully taken other key Freescale technologies, such as ColdFire[R] architecture and FlexRay[TM] technology, to market as licensable technology." IPextreme plans to market, sell and support the synthesizable e200 cores to embedded designers who intend to integrate the cores into SoC or ASSP (Application Specific Standard Part) An ASIC chip that is designed as a generic device for a particular market. Whereas an ASIC is typically used only by its creator, ASSPs are used by many different companies in the design of their products. See ASIC. products targeting the automotive, industrial and low-end networking markets. The licensing initiative gives designers ready access to a full range of high-performance, low-power, small-footprint cores that are software compatible with the extensive Power Architecture installed base and that are supported by a large and growing ecosystem of development tools. Under terms of the licensing agreement, IPextreme will package e200 cores as technology blocks for seamless, easy integration into semiconductor designs. IPextreme's integration specialists also will support customers acquiring e200 cores and provide maintenance services for the cores. "Nearly half the estimated 64 million automobiles expected to be sold this year will use high-performance microcontrollers (MCUs) based on Power Architecture cores, and we are delighted to make these verified and proven cores available to other companies designing SoCs and ASSPs through our IP commercialization program," said Warren Savage, IPextreme CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. . "Now SoC designers can work with IPextreme and Freescale to integrate e200 Power Architecture cores with other functionality to speed time to market and reduce system cost and complexity." Power Architecture technology is the leading 32-bit MCU (1) (MicroController Unit) A computer on a single chip. See microcontroller. (2) (Multipoint Control Unit) A device that is used to moderate a videoconference of three or more end points (users at computers or groups of users architecture for the automotive industry and the dominant architecture for powertrain control. The e200 core family has been thoroughly road-tested in Freescale's diverse automotive MCU products. To date, Freescale has shipped more than one million e200 core-based MPC (1) (Mobile PC) A handheld or laptop computer. See handheld computer, laptop computer and Ultra-Mobile PC. (2) (MultiPath Channel) See multipath. 5500 family MCUs with zero-defect quality. Freescale recently announced a dual e200 core product line, the MPC5510 family, designed to enhance the performance, power efficiency and flexibility of automotive body electronics. In February 2006, Freescale and STMicroelectronics launched a joint design program aimed at driving automotive industry innovation through collaboratively developed MCU products built on e200 cores. "Freescale's move to license its e200 core family strengthens Power Architecture technology as an alternative to widely licensed embedded-processor cores from other vendors," said Tom R. Halfhill, a senior analyst for In-Stat's Microprocessor Report. "Power Architecture technology is versatile enough to span the whole range of the processor market, from low-power embedded systems to high-performance servers, and licensing initiatives such as Freescale's can greatly expand the market for Power Architecture processors. The e200 family, a worthy licensing debut for Freescale, is competitive for automotive controllers, avionics, industrial systems, consumer electronics and other embedded applications." About Freescale's e200 Core Family Freescale's e200 family of synthesizable, high-efficiency cores, built on the Power ISA (1) (Instruction Set Architecture) See instruction set. (2) (Interactive Services Association) See Internet Alliance. (3) (Internet Security and Acceleration) See .NET. Version 2.03, is intended for cost-sensitive, embedded real-time applications. The licensable e200 cores include four versions of the e200 core family: the e200z0, e200z1, e200z3 and e200z6 cores. The cores offer low interrupt latency, low-power design through clock gating, variable cache sizes, variable MMU (Memory Management Unit) The part of the computer that governs memory access. Either part of the CPU chip or housed on separate chips, the MMU controls memory partitions and virtual memory. See memory and virtual memory. MMU - Memory Management Unit sizes, static debug To correct a problem in hardware or software. Debugging software means locating the errors in the source code (the program logic). Debugging hardware means finding errors in the circuit design (logical circuits) or in the physical interconnections of the circuits. through Nexus1, real time debug through Nexus2/3 and an AMBA AMBA Area Metropolitana de Buenos Aires (Spanish) AMBA Advanced Microcontroller Bus Architecture AMBA American Mold Builders Association AMBA American Mustang and Burro Association AMBA Association of Master of Business Administration AHB AHB Advanced High-performance Bus AHB Assault Helicopter Battalion AHB Air Historical Branch AHB Attack Helicopter Battalion AHB Automatic Half Barriers AHB Aussie Home Brewers AHB Active Hyper Bass bus interface unit. The cores also may include Power ISA 2.03 features, such as a signal processing engine (SPE SPE - Software Practice and Experience ), single-precision floating-point unit and variable length encoding (VLE VLE Virtual Learning Environment (system for development of online education materials) VLE Vapor Liquid Equilibrium VLE Valeur Limite d'Exposition (French: threshold limit value ceiling) ) technology. The e200z0, z1 and z3 cores have a compact four-stage pipeline. The small-footprint z0 is designed to run the VLE instruction set, which delivers exceptional code density, reducing memory requirements. The z1 and z3 cores feature an MMU and also run the full 32-bit instruction set. For applications with significant signal processing requirements, the z3 core includes an SPE and floating point unit (FPU (Floating Point Unit) A computer circuit that handles floating point operations. FPU - floating-point unit ), which minimizes the need for an additional DSP (1) (Digital Signal Processor) A special-purpose CPU used for digital signal processing applications (see definition #2 below). It provides ultra-fast instruction sequences, such as shift and add, and multiply and add, which are commonly used in math-intensive . The z3 core also is optimized for cost-sensitive applications in which it can function effectively without any cache, sharply reducing silicon area and therefore cost. The e200z6 core, the highest-performing licensable Power Architecture core, is a single issue, seven-stage pipeline machine with all of the features of the z3 core, along with an integrated cache unit. Each e200 core is supported by an extensive development ecosystem that includes compilers, debuggers, real-time operating systems, reference boards and application code. Further broadening the ecosystem, IPextreme packages the processor cores with additional technology required by the integrator, such as an integrated test bench and full documentation in an EDA-neutral format that supports major EDA (1) (Electronic Design Automation) Using the computer to design, lay out, verify and simulate the performance of electronic circuits on a chip or printed circuit board. tool flows. e200 Core Licensing Availability For more information about the Power Architecture e200 core licensing program, visit http://www.freescale.com/files/pr/powerarchitecture.html or www.ip-extreme.com/IP/power_e200. About IPextreme Inc. IPextreme brings high-value intellectual property (IP) from large semiconductor companies to consumer and automotive system-on-chip (SOC) designers worldwide. These products are silicon proven to minimize design risk and provided in a process independent and EDA neutral format, for easy use by the broadest range of customers. With a decade of experience in developing, packaging, licensing and supporting IP, our team offers a complete business solution for semiconductor companies to strategically leverage their internal IP portfolio to grow overall revenue. IPextreme has offices in Campbell, California, Munich, Germany and Tokyo, Japan. www.ip-extreme.com. About Freescale Semiconductor Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. is a global leader in the design and manufacture of embedded semiconductors for the automotive, consumer, industrial, networking and wireless markets. The privately held company privately held company A firm whose shares are held within a relatively small circle of owners and are not traded publicly. is based in Austin, Texas, and has design, research and development, manufacturing or sales operations in more than 30 countries. Freescale is one of the world's largest semiconductor companies with 2006 sales of $6.4 billion (USD USD In currencies, this is the abbreviation for the U.S. Dollar. Notes: The currency market, also known as the Foreign Exchange market, is the largest financial market in the world, with a daily average volume of over US $1 trillion. ). www.freescale.com Freescale Technology Forum The Freescale Technology Forum (FTF FTF Face To Face (in person) FTF Freescale Technology Forum FTF Fair Trade Federation FTF First Things First (Chattanooga, TN family strengthening program) FTF First to Find ) has become the developer event of the year for the embedded semiconductor industry. The Forum, which debuted in 2005, has been enthusiastically received by the global developer community, drawing more than 12,000 attendees at FTF events worldwide since its inception. For more information about FTF events, please go to www.freescale.com/ftf. Reader Inquiry Response: Freescale Semiconductor P.O. Box 17927 Denver, CO 80217 USA The Power Architecture and Power.org wordmarks and the Power and Power.org logos and related marks are trademarks and service marks licensed by Power.org. IPextreme is a registered trademark of IPextreme Inc. Freescale[TM] and the Freescale logo are trademarks of Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. All other product or service names are the property of their respective owners. [c] Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 2007. |
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