TASKING DSP Tool Suites Meet the Needs of the Embedded
Communications MarketNew Releases Available for DSP56xxx and CARMEL
Dedham, Mass. — May 16, 2000 — TASKING, The
Embedded Communications Company, announced new releases
of its tool suites for Motorola's DSP56xxx and Infineon's CARMEL
platforms that provide the increased functionality and efficiency to
address the complexity and time-to-market demands of embedded
communications. Graphical performance analysis, enhanced register
handling, increased code efficiency, and more granular debugging
maximize developer productivity and fine tune application
performance. The tool suites, which include TASKING's Embedded
Development Environment (EDE), C compiler and CrossView Pro
debugger, now feature superior memory bank management, startup code
options, quick display of variable information as well as numerous
compiler and assembler optimizations. With these enhancements,
embedded communications developers are equipped to solve the complex
design issues that are part of delivering advanced communication
devices. "Better than any other alternatives, our
DSP tool suites meet the needs of customers creating embedded
communications applications on the DSP56xxx and CARMEL
platforms," said Laura Horn, TASKING's DSP/32-bit Product
Marketing Manager. "More and more companies want to harness
the power of DSP technology to develop and distinguish their
embedded communications devices in this highly competitive segment.
The TASKING tools meet that need, giving developers the foundation
required for wireless, modems, networking or handheld devices using
whatever protocols — VoIP, WAP, TCP/IP or others — are best for
their applications." The DSP56xxx Tool Suite — still the only
alternative to Motorola's free GNU tools — further eases migration
from the GNU tools significantly challenged by complex
communications tasks, by linking COFF files containing relative
branches. With this release, the DSP56xxx compiler optimizations
achieve up to a 20% improvement in floating-point performance, while
debugging capabilities pinpoint performance issues, speeding
resolution of problems. By using the same memory model options for
the compiler and assembler, TASKING simplifies application
development, enabling programmers to model and stack memory during
code generation. On-chip debugging, serial port drivers and
file-system simulation offer developers a new level of flexibility.
The CrossView Pro debugger offers the ability to commandeer one of
the timers to count instructions/cycles and to single step without
stopping if an interrupt occurs. "Using TASKING's DSP56xxx tools, we
reduced development time by a factor of three to four,"
says Mike Ray, Software Engineering Manager at IVL Technologies, the
world leader in vocal processing technology for the professional
audio, music, and karaoke markets. "With the next-generation
products currently in development, we expect this reduction to be
even greater." With CARMEL's strengths in third-generation
wireless and broadband connectivity applications, the CARMEL Tool
Suite strengthens TASKING's commitment to both the DSP and embedded
communications markets. The tool suite supports compiler
optimizations, language extensions for DSP applications, and the
configurable long instruction word technology of the Infineon CARMEL
DSP Core. TASKING's C-like assembler combines the performance of
assembly language with the ease of a C compiler, while offering
low-level control with function-like instructions for math,
procedures, program flow and hardware repeat instructions.
Enhancements to the CrossView Pro debugger let developers examine
pipeline stages, complex breakpoints and register groupings through
both the cycle-accurate simulator and on-chip-debugging-support. CARMEL's high-performance, low-power consumption
core and TASKING's superior software development tools provide an
ideal solution for today's embedded communications needs. "Both
Infineon and TASKING recognize the importance of embedded
communications markets," says Shaul Berger, Vice President
of Infineon's DSP Cores. "Our combined strengths set a
worldwide standard in open-architecture DSPs, which are capturing an
ever-increasing percentage of the market." With support for
EONIC System's Virtuoso RTOS that is ideally suited for DSP and ASIC
applications, developers can automatically scale their application
to nano- and micro-kernel footprints. Recognizing the need for developers to respond
efficiently to more complex tasks, both the DSP56xxx and CARMEL tool
suites offer immediate graphical feedback. For quick error detection
of the signal input, TASKING's graphical signal data analysis
reduces large sets of data into meaningful visual diagrams using
pre- or user-defined specifications in five formats: x-t plotting,
x-y plotting, FFT power spectrum, FFT waterfall and Eye diagram. In
addition to letting developers group registers, for example, by
special function, floating point, and UART, the enhanced register
handling automatically updates register values. Bubble-Spy
technology displays variable or function values in a popup box
activated by mouse-point positioning. These visual improvements,
along with symbolic register editing, offer developers the most
powerful and simple solution for addressing complex digital signal
processing needs.
Availability
The TASKING DSP56xxx V2.3 is available now on Windows 95/98/NT, SUN
Solaris, SUN O/S and HP/UX. The TASKING CARMEL Tool Suite V2.0 is
available now on Windows 95/98/NT and Sun Solaris. Demo versions of
each tool suite are available from the products area of TASKING's
web site www.tasking.com/products,
while the release notes and readme files can be downloaded from the
technical support area www.tasking.com/support. About TASKING
TASKING, the Embedded Communications Company, brings together the
software technology needed to compete in the embedded communications
era. TASKING's award-winning integrated development environment,
compiler, debugger, embedded Internet and RTOS offerings support a
wide range of DSPs and 8-, 16- and 32-bit microprocessors and
microcontrollers for all areas of embedded communications. TASKING,
founded in 1974, is a privately held company with headquarters in
Dedham, Massachusetts, and engineering, sales and support offices in
San Jose, California, the Netherlands, Germany, Italy, Japan and the
UK. TASKING's 100,000 licensed users include the world's leading
telecom, datacom, wireless and peripheral manufacturers. More
information about TASKING can be found at www.tasking.com and
www.embeddedcommunications.com. TASKING, the TASKING logo, The
Embedded Communications Company and BubbleSpy are trademarks of
TASKING. All other trademarks and logos are trademarks or registered
trademarks of their respective owners.
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