On mySimon: Sony HVR-HD1000U Mini DV Camcorder
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Stephen Shankland
Posted on ZDNet News: Sep 13, 2005 7:45:00 PM

The venture capital arm of Panasonic's North American operations has launched an effort to cultivate embedded-Linux start-ups.

The Panasonic Digital Concepts Center, through its newly established Technology Collaboration Center, is seeking to invest in four to five start-ups working on Linux technology for embedded computing systems such as consumer electronics devices. Through the initiative, which was launched Tuesday, the company will help the start-ups develop technology and find partners.

Panasonic and its Japanese parent, Matsushita, have been keen on Linux for consumer electronics. The company sells an advanced set-top box and 3G mobile phone that use the open-source operating system; it's also using Linux in consumer electronics for automobiles and home audiovisual products that are under development, a company representative said.

Embedded Linux is an active area of technology development. Wind River, a powerhouse in embedded technology, now has joined the Linux fray, challenging specialists such as MontaVista Software and TimeSys.

Another company, FSMLabs, is taking a different approach to embedded Linux, combining the open-source operating system with its own proprietary one, RTLinuxPro. The approach is tailored for applications that require very fast "real-time" response.

On Tuesday at the Embedded Systems Conference in Boston, FSMLabs said that its dual-kernel approach can result in a guaranteed response time of 8 microseconds--or 8 millionths of a second. MontaVista, which uses a Linux-only approach, has a latency of 98 microseconds, which the company says is still about 100 times better than a standard Linux kernel.

FSMLabs announced the speed test on a system using a dual-core Opteron processor from Advanced Micro Devices.

LynuxWorks, a traditional embedded operating system company that has added a Linux product, also announced a hybrid approach at the conference. A software foundation called LynxSecure lets the company's BlueCat, a version of Linux, and LynxOS-178, a proprietary operating system, run in separate partitions on the same computing system.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 5 Talkback(s)
Indeed
The GPL can be a bit tricky to understand at first read, but you can have proprietary modules, though they'll "taint" the GPL code (because it'd be linking with non GPL code)...... (Read the rest)
Posted by: thetargos Posted on: 09/14/05 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Notice they are NOT investing in Windows CE. That would be stupid.  DonnieBoy | 09/13/05
This can't be true  Yagotta B. Kidding | 09/13/05
Well, in this case, they are investing because it is GPL  DonnieBoy | 09/13/05
you mean...  Monkey_MCSE | 09/13/05
Indeed  thetargos | 09/14/05

What do you think?

advertisement
Click Here
advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

SmartPlanet

Click Here