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Tensilica Announces Industry's First MP3 Decoder Under 6 MHz.


Proves Xtensa HiFi 2 Audio Engine Ideal for Portable Devices

SANTA CLARA, Calif. -- Tensilica[R], Inc. today announced that it has optimized the MP3 decoder for its Xtensa[R] HiFi 2 Audio Engine and Diamond Standard 330HiFi processor core. This MP3 decoder now runs at the lowest power and is the most efficient in the industry, requiring just 5.7 MHz when running at 128Kbps, 44.1 KHz and dissipating 0.45 mW in TSMC's 65nm LP process (including memories). This makes Tensilica's Xtensa HiFi 2 Audio Engine ideal for adding MP3 playback to cellular phones, where current carrier requirements are for 100 hours of playback time on a battery charge, and increasing to 200 hours in the near future.

This 5.7 MHz requirement includes the entire MP3 decode functionality, including MPEG (Moving Pictures Experts Group) An ISO/ITU standard for compressing digital video. Pronounced "em-peg," it is the universal standard for digital terrestrial, cable and satellite TV, DVDs and digital video recorders (DVRs).  container parsing and variable length decoding (VLD VLD Vlaamse Liberalen en Democraten (Flemish Liberal Political Party)
VLD Visible Laser Diode
VLD Variable Length Decoding
VLD Variable Length Decoder
VLD Very Low Drag (bullet)
VLD Visual Leak Detector
, also known as Huffman decoding). Some competing offerings are merely accelerator blocks that exclude portions of the complex control code in MP3 such as VLD, and thus rely on a processor to perform VLD decoding. Tensilica's 5.7 MHz figure is all inclusive.

"Any good designer can get MP3 freeware off the Internet and run it on most processors, but they will find that it requires the processor to run at high MHz and, thus, is power inefficient," stated Larry Przywara, Tensilica's director of mobile multimedia marketing. "By carefully optimizing our software, we were able to get better results than we've seen from any published competitive performance specifications."

Tensilica's MP3 decoder implements MPEG-1, MPEG-2 layer 1/2/3, and MPEG-2.5 layer 3 stereo decoding with support for constant bit rate, variable bit rate and free formats. It is fully compliant with ISO/IEC ISO/IEC International Organization for Standardization/International Electrotechnical Commission (ITU-T M 3000)  11172-4.

Tensilica's HiFi 2 Audio Engine is the most popular commercial audio processor core for SOC designs, and this year Tensilica's customers are forecasting they will ship 100 million HiFi Audio Engine-enabled processor cores in a wide variety of consumer devices. Tensilica's HiFi 2 Audio Engine is optimized with specialized audio instructions to increase code density (reducing memory requirements) and lower power (reducing MHz requirements), making it very efficient for a wide range of audio-enabled consumer products.

Tensilica's cores with the HiFi 2 Audio Engine are full featured processors, used by customers to run operating systems, control code, and other functions in addition to audio.

In addition to MP3 decode and encode, the following software packages are available for the HiFi 2 Audio Engine: AC-3 decode and encode, AM3D, Dolby Digital Plus Dolby Digital Plus (DD+), also known as E-AC-3, is an audio compression system that was developed specifically for the introduction of HDTV and HD DVD/Blu-ray Disc. It is a development of the Dolby Digital (AC-3) audio compression system. It supports data rates up to 6.  5.1 and 7.1 decode, MPEG-4 aacPlus v1 and V2 decode and encode, MPEG-1/4 AAC (Advanced Audio Coding) An audio compression technology that is part of the MPEG-2 and MPEG-4 standards. AAC, especially MPEG-4 AAC, provides greater compression and better sound quality than MP3, which also came out of the MPEG standard.  LC decode and encode, Ogg Vorbis decode, QSound microQ, SONiVOX AudioiNSIDE, WMA (Windows Media Audio) An audio compression method from Microsoft. Known originally as MSAudio, this proprietary format competes with the MP3 and AAC methods. WMA encodes rapidly and is known to be especially effective at low bit rates.  decode and encode, AMR (1) (Adaptive Multi-Rate) A variable rate speech codec selected by the 3GPP for the 3G evolution of the GSM cellphone system (WCDMA). Using the Algebraic CELP (ACELP) compression technology, AMR provides toll quality sound at transmission rates from 4.75 to 12.  narrowband and wideband speech, G.729AB speech, and SRS SRS, SRS-A

see slow-reacting substance.
 WOW XT, Xspace 3D and TruSound HD. Tensilica's audio partners include: AM3D, Coding Technologies, Dolby Laboratories, Microsoft, QSound Labs, SONiVOX, SRS Labs, and Thompson Multimedia.

Pricing and Availability

Tensilica's MP3 decoder is available now starting at $16,875 for a project-based license. Tensilica's processor cores are licensed separately.

About Tensilica

Tensilica, Inc., is the recognized leader in configurable processor technology and has leveraged that technology to become the leading supplier of licensable controllers and DSP cores for mobile audio and video applications. Tensilica offers the broadest line of controller, CPU CPU
 in full central processing unit

Principal component of a digital computer, composed of a control unit, an instruction-decoding unit, and an arithmetic-logic unit.
, network, and specialty DSP processors on the market today - including full software toolchain and modeling support - in both an off-the-shelf format via the Diamond Standard Series cores and with full designer configurability with the Xtensa processor family. The modern design behind all of Tensilica's processor cores provide semiconductor companies and system OEMs with the lowest power, smallest area solutions for high-volume products including mobile phones and other consumer electronics, networking and telecommunications equipment, and computer peripherals. For more information on Tensilica's patented, benchmark-proven processors, visit www.tensilica.com.

Editors' Notes:

* Tensilica and Xtensa are registered trademarks belonging to Tensilica Inc. All other company and product names mentioned are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of their respective owners.

* Tensilica's announced licensees include Afa Technologies, ALPS, 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) 
 (JNI Corporation), Aquantia, Astute Networks, Atheros, ATI (AMD (Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., Sunnyvale, CA, www.amd.com) A major manufacturer of semiconductor devices including x86-compatible CPUs, embedded processors, flash memories, programmable logic devices and networking chips. ), Avago Technologies, Avision, Bay Microsystems, Berkeley Wireless Research Center, Broadcom, Cisco Systems, CMC Microsystems, Conexant Systems, Cypress, Crimson Microsystems, EE Solutions, Enuclia, ETRI ETRI Electronics & Telecommunications Research Institute (Korea)
ETRI Enhanced Threat Reduction Initiative
ETRI Electronics Telecommunication Research Inc.
, FUJIFILM Microdevices, Fujitsu Ltd., Hudson Soft, Hughes Network Systems Hughes Network Systems, LLC (HNS), is a provider of broadband satellite network products for businesses and consumers. HNS pioneered the development of high-speed satellite Internet access services and IP-based networks with its original DirecPC service but which it now markets , iBiquity Digital, Ikanos Communications, LG Electronics, Lucid Information Technology, Marvell, MediaWorks, NEC (NEC Corporation, Tokyo, www.nec.com, www.necus.com) An electronics conglomerate known in the U.S. for its monitors. In Japan, it had the lion's share of the PC market until the late 1990s (see PC 98).

NEC was founded in Tokyo in 1899 as Nippon Electric Company, Ltd.
 Laboratories America, NEC Corporation, NetEffect, Neterion, Nethra Imaging, Nippon Telephone and Telegraph (NTT), NuFront, NVIDIA, Olympus Optical Co. Ltd., Penstar, Plato Networks, PnpNetwork Technologies, sci-worx, Seiko Epson, Solid State Systems, Sony, STMicroelectronics, Stretch, TranSwitch Corporation, u-Nav Microelectronics, Victor Company of Japan (JVC), WiQuest Communications, and XM Radio.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Date:May 16, 2007
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