Search results for "STMicroelectronics "
STMicroelectronics Enables Economical ‘Zapper’ Set-Top Boxes for Worldwide Digital-TV Access
STMicroelectronics has introduced a single-chip demodulator/decoder for Internet-TV, terrestrial or cable set-top boxes, to increase accessibility to digital television in growing markets such as China, India, Latin America and African territories, as well as countries where analog switch-off is ongoing.
STMicroelectronics Extends Class-D Amplifier Portfolio, Enabling High-End Home Multimedia to Look as Good as it Sounds
STMicroelectronics has announced production availability of an analog-input 2x100W class-D power amplifier. This high-end amplifier extends the company’s range of class-D devices that deliver audiophile sound quality in components smaller than competing devices by using an advanced chip manufacturing process.
Innovative Chip from STMicroelectronics Enables Greater Storage Capacity and Faster Multimedia Access on Portable Devices
STMicroelectronics today introduced the industry’s first voltage-level translator compliant with the latest SD (Secure Digital)1 3.0 standard. The increase in storage capacity and access speed of SD 3.0, together with the low static power consumption and small package size of ST’s new level translator, makes it an ideal choice for interfacing application processors or digital basebands to SD memory cards in mobile phones, portable media playe...
Sensorless Field-Oriented Motor-Control Solution for ARM Cortex Based Devices
STMicroelectronics has announced a complete three-phase motor-control development kit based on the STM32 Flash microcontroller – launched mid-2007 – which provides all the necessary hardware and firmware to enable users to evaluate this 32-bit solution, and to begin development of their own sensorless motor-control application. The STM32 uses the powerful ARM Cortex-M3 core, developed specifically to address the requirements of cost-sensitiv...
PGI and NVIDIA Team To Deliver CUDA Fortran Compiler
The Portland Group, a wholly-owned subsidiary of STMicroelectronics and a supplier of compilers for high-performance computing (HPC), today announced an agreement with NVIDIA under which the two companies plan to develop new Fortran language support for CUDA GPUs.
PGI 9.0 Compilers Simplify x64+GPU Programming
The Portland Group has announced the general availability of the PGI Release 9.0 line of high-performance parallelizing compilers and development tools for Linux, Mac OS X and Windows. PGI Release 9.0 is the first general release to include support for the high-level PGI Accelerator programming model on x64 processor-based Linux systems incorporating NVIDIA CUDA-enabled GPUs.
Mentor Graphics to Extend Cooperation with STMicroelectronics for Advanced Chip-Development Design Solutions
Mentor Graphics and STMicroelectronics one of the world’s leading semiconductor suppliers, today announced a broad-scoped collaboration to develop advanced design solutions at the 32-nm technology node and down to 20-nm node.
STMicroelectronics Demonstrates Complete System Solution for Laser Printers
STMicroelectronics today unveiled a complete system solution for laser-printer applications, based on the Company’s SPEAr® embedded microprocessor technology. The working-prototype formatter board[1] comprises all hardware, firmware and software components, reducing development time and required resources for printer manufacturers.
STMicroelectronics and Green Hills Software announce software support for SPEAr microprocessor families
STMicroelectronics and Green Hills Software, Inc., the largest independent vendor of embedded software solutions, has announced software development tools and operating system support for the STMicroelectronics SPEAr300 and SPEAr600 family of microprocessor units (MPUs). Green Hills Software’s INTEGRITY® real-time operating system (RTOS), which is designed for use in embedded systems that require maximum reliability and absolute security, is ...
Silicon Carbide Schottky Diodes from STMicroelectronics
Ordinary silicon diodes used in switched-mode power supplies lose up to 1% efficiency by not turning off immediately, but STMicroelectronics claims to be among the first companies to introduce silicon carbide (SiC) diodes that save this energy normally lost during switching.