TASKING PROVIDES TOOLS FOR GOVERNMENT FUNDED REAL-TIME EMBEDDED
SYSTEMS RESEARCHKansas State University chooses TASKING Software
Development Tools for research and education
Dedham, Mass. — December 7, 1999 — TASKING,
Inc., today announced that it is providing Kansas State University
with 68K and C166 software development tools for use in courses
specifically designed for real-time embedded systems research and
education. "TASKING was selected after a lengthy search for
the appropriate tools," said Professor Mitchell Neilsen. "What
tipped the scales in TASKING's favor was that our students want to
program in C ++, and TASKING provides C++ support for both targets,
including the only C166 tools on the market with C++ support." Commenting on TASKING's tools, Neilsen continued,
"Our evaluation revealed that the tools not only had the
powerful features needed to generate efficient code, but they also
included an easy-to-use development environment ideally suited for
students with limited experience. This will definitely help to get
them up and running quickly, so they can focus on building useful
applications." "We are pleased that our tools were
chosen for this NSF-funded embedded systems research," said
Brian Mulcahey, VP of Worldwide Corporate Marketing at TASKING. "As
the demand for greater functionality in electronic devices continues
to increase, it's important that our schools have the tools to train
the industry's future embedded systems engineers. " Kansas State purchased toolsets for both 68K
and C166 microcontrollers. Tools include C++ and C compilers,
CrossView Pro debugger and TASKING's Embedded Development
Environment (EDE). Key application areas include mechanical control
systems and industrial automation. The embedded systems curriculum
at Kansas State consists of four courses at the upper
undergraduate/beginning graduate level: Real-Time Embedded Systems
Fundamentals, Real-Time Embedded Systems I, Real-Time Embedded
Systems II, and Applied Research in Real-Time Embedded Systems. To
optimize time spent by students in the laboratory, each student will
be provided with a virtual laboratory on CD-ROM. The virtual
laboratory will include multimedia presentations of the lecture
material from class, extensive reference material, a microkernel
simulator, and software to simulate various parts of an embedded
system. With the proliferation of inexpensive and compact processing
capability, the need for real-time embedded systems in research and
education is growing, and this project is expected to make a
significant impact in that arena.
About TASKING, Inc.
TASKING is a developer and supplier of integrated software
development tools for the embedded systems market and supports a
wide range of CISC, RISC, microcontroller and DSP semiconductor
technologies in the Telecommunications, Data Communications,
Automotive, Consumer Electronics and Office Automation markets.
TASKING's knowledge of embedded systems results from the merger of
three companies (BSO, Intermetrics Microsystems and TASKING) which
are now embedded together to make their customers more successful.
The three companies bring over 20 years of experience each, starting
in 1974 with BSO pioneering the concept of cross development.
Headquartered in Dedham, Mass., TASKING has offices worldwide,
located in the Netherlands, Germany, Italy, Japan and UK. For more
information about TASKING, visit their web site at www.tasking.com.
About Kansas State University
Founded in 1863, Kansas State University is a comprehensive,
research, land-grant institution located in Manhattan, 125 miles
west of Kansas City. Total enrollment is over 20,000, including
nearly 3,000 engineering students. For more infornmation visit their
web site at www.ksu.edu
About The National Science Foundation The NSF funds research and education in science and engineering,
through grants, contracts and cooperative agreements. The Foundation
accounts for about 20 percent of federal support to academic
institutions for basic research. For more information visit their
web site at www.nsf.gov. TASKING and the TASKING logo are
trademarks of TASKING. All other trademarks and logos are trademarks
or registered trademarks of their respective owners.
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