Freescale and Jungo Team to Deliver PowerQUICC(TM) Architecture-based Residential and Business Gateways.SAN JOSE, Calif. -- Combination of PowerQUICC II processors and Jungo software provides scalable, cost-effective platform for home and office networking equipment Freescale Semiconductor (NYSE NYSE See: New York Stock Exchange :FSL FSL - Formal Semantics Language. A language for compiler writing. ["A Formal Semantics for Computer Languages and its Application in a Compiler-Compiler", J.A. Feldman, CACM 9(1) (Jan 1966)]. [Sammet 1969, p. 641]. ) (NYSE:FSL.B) and Jungo Ltd. have joined forces to deliver platform solutions for residential and business gateway products. The solutions are based on the MPC (1) (Mobile PC) A handheld or laptop computer. See handheld computer, laptop computer and Ultra-Mobile PC. (2) (MultiPath Channel) See multipath. 8272 PowerQUICC(TM) II processor family containing a PowerPC(R) core and powered by Jungo's popular OpenRG and OpenSMB software platforms. Jungo is a leading provider of home, SOHO Soho (sōhō`, sə–), district of Westminster, London, England, known for its continental restaurants. Once a fashionable quarter, it became popular among writers and artists in the 19th cent. and SMB gateway software platforms. Freescale and Jungo's combined solution bundles OpenRG and OpenSMB software with Freescale's MPC8272 Application Development System (ADS). The two companies are jointly demonstrating the residential and business gateway platform solution at the Network Systems Design Conference (booth #504) in San Jose this week. "Freescale's leadership in the processor market, combined with Jungo's feature-rich software, allows our customers to introduce a wide range of best-in-class networking devices, broadband routers and gateways," said Udi Yuhjtman, Jungo's vice president of business development. "Our relationship with Freescale represents our commitment to introduce to market highly integrated and complete hardware and software platforms to help our customers, OEMs, ODMs and telcos get to market fast." The bundled solutions are designed to shorten development cycles and accelerate time-to-market for customer premises equipment See CPE. (CPE (Customer Premises Equipment) Communications equipment that resides on the customer's premises. CPE - Customer Premises Equipment ) developed around the PowerQUICC architecture and Jungo's software platforms. Target applications include smart residential gateways, DSL/cable routers, integrated access devices (IADs), wireless access points, voice gateways, VPN routers, home storage routers, office-in-a box and other CPE/ SOHO and SMB networking products. "The residential gateway market is seeing significant growth, driven heavily by telco deployments," says In-Stat analyst Joyce Putscher. "We see this market approaching 30 million gateways in 2009." "Explosive growth in broadband and triple-play services is driving strong demand for residential and business gateway products, and our customers look to us for fast time-to-market solutions," said Lynelle McKay, vice president and general manager of Freescale's Digital Systems Division. "Partnering with Jungo puts market-leading evaluation and development tools based on PowerQUICC architecture and OpenRG and OpenSMB software platforms into the hands of gateway developers -- fast!" About Jungo's Software Platforms Jungo's OpenRG and OpenSMB are scalable suites of software technologies that provide CPE vendors with the infrastructure needed to bring to market Home, SOHO and SMB gateways. OpenRG and OpenSMB significantly simplify development cycles, improve product performance and accelerate time-to-market with new revenue generating services. OpenRG and OpenSMB include an optimized Linux-based operating system, optional VxWorks support, communication and routing protocols, network security (Stateful Packet Inspection See stateful inspection. Firewall), wireless LAN security One issue with corporate wireless networks in general, and WLANs in particular, involves the need for security. Many early access points could not discern whether or not a particular user had authorization to access the network. (802.1x, RADIUS client, WPA WPA: see Work Projects Administration. WPA in full Works Progress Administration later (1939–43) Work Projects Administration U.S. work program for the unemployed. ) Virtual Private Networking (VPN), Universal Plug and Play, web-based management, remote upgrade capabilities, support for CableHome 1.1-based devices and a wide range of home and business networking applications. About the MPC8272 Application Development System (ADS) Freescale's MPC8272ADS system provides a comprehensive evaluation platform for MPC8272 family processors. The MPC8272ADS board features 64MB of SDRAM (Synchronous DRAM) A type of dynamic RAM (DRAM) memory chip that has been widely used since the late 1990s. SDRAM chips eliminated wait states by dividing the chip into two cell blocks and interleaving data between them. attached to a 60x bus and an 8MB program flash SIMM supporting up to 32MB. On-board interfaces include JTAG/COP, Dual UART (Universal Asynchronous Receiver Transmitter) The electronic circuit that makes up the serial port. Also known as "universal serial asynchronous receiver transmitter" (USART), it converts parallel bytes from the CPU into serial bits for transmission, and vice , 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. 1.1, two 100/10-Base-T Fast Ethernets, and a 155 Mbps ATM UNI with optical interface. Using ADS on-board resources and a debugger, developers can download and run code, set breakpoints, display memory registers and connect proprietary hardware through expansion connectors. The resulting code can be used in a wide range of PowerQUICC II processor-based systems. About the MPC8272 PowerQUICC II Family Freescale's MPC8272 processor family offers exceptional integration with features and interfaces optimized for cost-sensitive system designs. MPC8272 family devices incorporate the embedded PowerPC 603e core in speeds of 266MHz, 300MHz and 400MHz, with bus speeds up to 133MHz. The devices also feature a 266MHz, 32-bit RISC-based Communications Processor Module (CPM) to handle communications protocol acceleration and termination. Freescale's integrated security engine supports DES, 3DES, MD-5, SHA-1, AES and ARC-4 encryption algorithms, as well as a Public Key accelerator and on-chip Random Number Generator A program routine that produces a random number. Random numbers are created easily in a computer, since there are many random events that take place such as the duration between keystrokes. . MPC8272 family devices with integrated security include the MPC8272 and the MPC8248; the MPC8271 and MPC8247 are available for applications that do not require encryption acceleration. For more details, see the MPC8272 product page at www.freescale.com/powerquicc. About Freescale Semiconductor Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. (NYSE:FSL) (NYSE:FSL.B) is a global leader in the design and manufacture of embedded semiconductors for the automotive, consumer, industrial, networking and wireless markets. Freescale became a publicly traded company publicly traded company A company whose shares of common stock are held by the public and are available for purchase by investors. The shares of publicly traded firms are bought and sold on the organized exchanges or in the over-the-counter market. in July 2004 after more than 50 years as part of Motorola, Inc. The company is based in Austin, Texas, and has design, research and development, manufacturing or sales operations in more than 30 countries. Freescale, a member of the S&P 500(R), is one of the world's largest semiconductor companies, with 2004 sales of $5.7 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(TM) and the Freescale logo are trademarks of Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. All other product or service names are the property of their respective owners. The "PowerPC" name is a trademark of IBM Corp. and used under license. (C) Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 2005. |
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