Atmel Chip for Embedded Linux Devices
Lee writes, "ATMEL launches single-chip Internet enabler fueling low-cost Internet phone (VoIP), e-mail and MP3 appliances. A complete single-chip solution IC, featuring Embedded Linux and application software delivering true telephone sound quality." We've been saying for some time that embedded boxes are one of the strongest futures for that whole Linux thing. I'm still waiting to see one of these little Linux boxes make it to the market ...
For us cheap people who have to run a software solution currently, what telephone applications do we have under Linux currently? How well do they work? Do they work with a dialup? Encryption? Secure?
Uhm, this would make a really lame MP3 player if the sound quality is "telephone quality." Telephones have really lousy sound quality. That might be fine for 8Kbps mono MP3 files, but for anything sane, you'll need much better.
You guys should keep a log: start pinging a site when it gets mentioned and record how long it takes to be slashdotted.
For even telephone-quality calls to go through IP *extremely* fast connections are needed at both ends of the call. Right now most of you are running 56k modems (or cable/DSL if you're lucky).
At least DSL is needed in order to provide calls over IP. Dialpad.com has made some progress (I use it on my 56k and can hear the other side fine) but this hardware solution is needed in every home using VoIP.
US businesses that currently accept chip and PIN/signature
Silly troll. I work in manufacturing and you reminded me of an OS/2 controlled line we have. With the push for NT on everything, I almost forgot about the OS/2 Plant Works on the old IBM Industrial computer. Its slow as molassas, but for the four years we had it, its never crashed once. Its made it through power failures, ripped cables from forklifts, misapplied solvents eating the touch screen, and the constant poking by bored operators, but it always runs. Why the scrap producing, property damage inducing NT is being picked over OS/2, I'll never know.
That was four years ago. If a closed source solution is picked today, that will be a mystery to ponder four years from now. Nothing quite like the networking stopping, because the time license expired at midnight on a weekend and $1,000,000 worth of product a day stops. That's when the vendors and sales droids got you by the balls.
You make it sound like it's some kind of degenerate fad..."whole linux thing" ????
BAH!!
On another random note, that Tux icon is pretty sweet!
Internet is fast enough. You just don't have- ------------------
garanteed bandwith. I think in IP version 6 this
is solved. You can claim an amount of bandwith
with that. 3 KB/s should be enough for telephone.
-------------------------------------
UNIX isn't dead, it just smells funny...
-------------------------------------------------
UNIX isn't dead, it just sme
What kind of crack are you smoking?
Obviously the cheap kind.
Just the other day, Denis Chertykov announced that his port of GCC to Atmel's AVR and ATMega chips was going to be included in the next official release of GCC (2.96.2, I think). [Congratulations, Denis!]
While I'm a bit curious about their new chip, I'm also kinda cautious. Why? Because this is a big jump for the company.
Atmel, in the past, has focused more on the *really* embedded market-- simple, inexpensive chips (very much like the 8051) to be used for applications such as keyboard controllers. Or for cheap calculators.
But, really, if this thing is going to be capable of running a "real" Linux, then it's definitely not a *simple* piece of hardware. You can't use an AT90S8515 (sorta like an 8051, but based on a RISC-like architecture) to perform VoIP. Or to do e-mail. It has to have at least enough complexity to handle the minimal features of the Linux kernel-- multitasking, memory management, etc. That means that it's going to be anything *but* simple. It's going to be complex (maybe not as complex as a 386 or a Motorala 68K, but complex nonetheless). And that's different from anything Atmel has done recently.
I'm not saying it's bad. I'm just wondering what direction this will take the company in. It's something different from what they normally do-- will they stick with it?
Isn't TiVo an embedded Linux box that has made it to the market?
Were any marketing professional ever to resort to crack, rest assured it would not be the cheap $3 kind. Only premium crack would be consumed by a true marketer. What would his/her co-workers think ?
Rock solid guarantees? Good lord that was funny, thanks for the laugh pal I am gonna have to go grab a beer that was so funny. Windows CE bites.....
Linux on these devices will start hitting the street very soon weather you like it or not. Coolness factor isn't enough they have to be cheap enough to make and functional enough to use.
Palm Pilot already killed the whole novelty portable gadget thing two years ago. These days people want to get real work done. Now if we could get DeCSS on a device that was all edge to edge touch screen and just barely wide enough to include a DVD drive but only 1/2" thick.
Ohh, wait DeCSS was having a "chilling effect" on innovations in the DVD marketplace. Or could it be the lawsuits that are doing it ?
Here is a suggestion. All those companies who could use this code to cut costs on both CSS licensing and chipsets ( No CSS hardware decoder needed ) should get together and sponsor the defense and any possible counter attack ( The MPAA can be sued on this ). In the mean time they could form something like the Trillion project to hammer out the code which should then be 1.0 quality by the time the case ends.
Imagine these things hitting the street in Christmas seconds after the temporary injunction has been lifted ?
--= Isn't it surprising how badly I spell ?
CNNin
Thank you.
With the advent of Superior Windows 2000 crack computing into our lives and homes, one wonders if the return of LSD inspired programming should revolutionize this bastard freak of New Technology. A modern commercial system with 99.97 uptime that needs rebooting twice a day for system memory leaks and heap corruption inspires the need for reflection upon the wise master of computing history. NT is the bastion of crack programming and suicides.
Here's another similar article: Netsilicon makes embedded Linux production-ready for networked devices
--The more you know, the less you know.
This seems to be a serious posting. dmg makes some valid points.
Moderate this up please.
Yimm Kimmmmip makes some valid points.
Moderate this up please.
This is a serious posting
Moderate this up please
This guy makes a valid point
Moderate this up please.
Are the moderators on crack ??
Please moderate this up.
Remember - that's one way! You need to add the reverse direction, and then add the packet overhead of RTP (real time protocol) and UDP, plus the control signals. You can do great IP calls and use about 16kbps or less. I know. I do it all the time!
Our products (PCI/ISA/PCMCIA) allow you to connect a normal phone to your PC (and provide dial tone, DTMF, ringing, etc) and provide the compression codecs. We have open source linux drivers, and are in the kernel as of 2.2.14. For more information, write me or see our web site: Quicknet Technologies, Inc.
Check out the OpenH323 Project and the OpenPhone Project for more information.
Take a look at www.aplio.com for Aplio/Pro device which is an Internet Phone running Linux....
Unfortunately, I think you're going to have to pay a bit more than $17 for a CPU capable of doing decent DVD playback...
Yes, TiVo runs Linux and is way cool. But at ~$1000 I'd hardly call it a "little Linux box". "Little" probably implies dick^H^H^H^Hdiskless and portable. A TiVo-type device isn't very useful without about 20Gbytes of harddrive and hardware assist for MPEG II encoding/decoding.
It's good to hear that the gcc source will be released, but what about the kernel code?
Isn't most of it under the GPL?
I'm very seriously thinking about investing some good money in this company (well, I'm 18 and don't have that much money, but a good amount for someone of my status)... The stock price is at the high of its life, but that hasn't stopped me before, and whenever I have a good feeling about something like this, it does great.
:) I bought it when I had just heard about DSL and thought it was the future. I was pretty right... and embedded linux systems should be the future as well.
Kinda like when i bought netopia at 6, 100 shares. today netopia is at 87. 1450% increase isn't too shabby
also bought amd at 17, now at 42, its been up to 45 or higher very recently. AMD has much growth as well to come, especially if Intel keeps screwing up!
Bought a company called aware at 10, just because my uncle opened my account with 100 bux, so i bought 10 shares. It's a cablemodem/dslmodem company. Shortly it rose to 80!
I don't buy stock because of the stupid numbers, I buy it becuase the future of the company looks promising. There have been others. I think that this technology is VERY promising, and from that standpoint, im' going to buy this stock.
Any other viewpoints? Thanks!
- Mike Roberto
-- roberto@apk.net
--- AOL IM: MicroBerto
Berto
I've looked all over the ATMEL site and I can't find any specs on the AT75C310. ATMEL are usually really good, supplying pdf files that outline everything about the chip. $17 sounds like a great price but it really doesn't help me if I can't get any tech specs. Anyone?
How we know is more important than what we know.
It's reachable now. The slashdot spike having passed.
I searched for "75C310" on the site: NOTHING!
(spare me!)
so I tried laboriously "AT75C310" and found the
only info they had: The press release itself.
I cant wait to see more details.
OB KillerApp: An OpenHardware CryptoPhone based on FreeSpeech/PGPphone/Nautilus. It would connect to all the popular RJ spigots: 4wire (Hand/headset), 2wire POTS, and Ethernet.
I seem to remember a unique feature of ARM processors: The output of ALL instructions can have an arbitrary barrel shift (and XOR?) with no overhead to the cycle time of the result.
That would make the CPU ideal for peer-reviewd Crypto (and I dont mean DES or ROT13!).
I hope the core versions "support" all of the instructions of the hardware, unlike the Motorola COLDFIRE core.
in case it gets slashdotted here is some of the details:
here is the checklist of whats in it:
it seems to run at either 80Mhz or 96Mhz, could be it needs both clock speeds.
Now to get some samples....
cya, Andrew...
This is my sig, exciting huh!
Check out http://www.aplio.com. They use the device, and were crucial in its development. Interesting application, but an expensive solution for now. Robert