Device Software Optimization
News In Depth Analysis Blog Contributor Center Whitepaper Library Events
You are currently not logged in to this website. Click here to log in.


VxWorks 6 Gains Green Hill Support

by Peter Krass

October 03, 2005

Here's what's new in the DSO community: Green Hills announced it will support Wind River's VxWorks 6...Phoenix has become a Microsoft Windows embedded partner...and Sun says it will support MontaVista Linux.

Green Hills announced that its MULTI development environment now supports Wind River Systems’ VxWorks RTOS version 6. In the process, Green Hills says, the vendor has outdone Wind River in becoming the first vendor to offer a single development environment that supports both versions 5 and 6 of VxWorks. (Wind River supports both, but offers Tornado for 5, Workbench for 6.)

Phoenix Technologies has joined Microsoft's Windows Embedded Partner (WEP) program as a Gold-level member. (See the official release.) Phoenix will offers embedded developers its CoreArchitect, a developer tool built on Microsoft Visual Studio 2005.

Sun Microsystems recently a blade server that supports MontaVista Linux. (See the official Sunflash.) Sun's Netra ATCA blade server will come in two versions: the SPARC processor blade should ship by year's end, while an AMD Opteron processor-based blade is set for Q1 of next year. Sun announced support for MontaVista Carrier Grade Edition (CGE). It also says MontaVista is working on an optimized port of its Linux environment for Sun's ATCA blade platform and multi-core AMD Opteron processor-based blade server.

Posted at 01:58 PM



Please log in to post comments.

This is a public forum. CMP Media and its affiliates are not responsible for and do not control what is posted herein. CMP Media makes no warranties or guarantees concerning any advice dispensed by its staff members or readers.

Community standards in this comment area do not permit hate language, excessive profanity, or other patently offensive language. Please be aware that all information posted to this comment area becomes the property of CMP Media LLC and may be edited and republished in print or electronic format as outlined in CMP Media's Terms of Service.

Important Note: This comment area is NOT intended for commercial messages or solicitations of business.



Recent Entries

June 2006
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30  

Archives



Syndicate this site (XML)

Powered by
Movable Type 3.14

Analyst View

NEW: Pre-Integrated Platforms and the Looming Software-Development Crisis

Philip Ling

Unless the industry changes, it soon won't have enough developers to write all the code that today's complex devices require, says Enea's VP of product marketing.


Read the column

Focus on the Big Picture

Philip Ling

To realize and accelerate the full benefits of device software optimization, focus on productivity and innovation at the application level, writes Encirq's vice president of worldwide marketing.


Read the column

Write Once, Benefit Many

Philip Ling

If you're not reusing device software, you're not getting the most from your DSO strategy, says the co-founder and technical director of Proven Software Solutions.


Read the column

Linux-Based Phones: New Kids on the Block

Michel Gien

The open source OS is the key to how next-generation phones will be developed to compete and win, writes Jaluna's executive VP of corporate strategy.


Read the column

The DSO Challenge: Standardization vs. Choice

John Carbone

Only by thinking at the enterprise level can we achieve the full promise of device software optimization, says the VP of marketing at Express Logic.


Read the column

Device Software Optimization Demands a Universal Operating System

Dan O'Dowd

The benefits will include superior integration, security and reliability-plus on-time, under-budget delivery, says the founder and CEO of Green Hills Software.


Read the column

Taking Design to the System Level

Christopher Lennard

After many false starts, the infrastructure and standards for ESL design are starting to make a difference, according to the ESL strategic marketing manager and engineering manager for ESL tools at ARM.


Read the column

Browse more Industry View columns

DSO World Presentations