| TSI's LavaLogic receives synthesis product results 
 TSI TelSys Corp                                                         TSI
 Shares issued 9,754,200                                  Mar 10 close $0.95
 Mon 13 Mar 2000                                                News Release
 Mr. Jay Pisula reports
 LavaLogic, a business unit of TSI TelSys Corporation, is shipping its first
 product,  Forge, a system-level electronic design compiler, and the results
 of its benchmarking activities.
 Forge improves productivity by allowing designers to work at higher  levels
 of abstraction and thus addresses the growing design productivity gap.
 Forge is an  advanced  compiler  that  improves  productivity  by  allowing
 designers   to   write   system  descriptions  using  standard  programming
 languages, such  as  C,  C++  and  the  Java  programming  language.  Forge
 automatically   compiles   these   descriptions   into  efficient  hardware
 descriptions (RTL Verilog) compatible with popular design environments such
 as those from Cadence, Mentor and Synopsys.
 Results -- improving design productivity
 Recent benchmarking  activities  involving  a  Sun  Microsystems'  picoJava
 Floating Point Unit (FPU) have demonstrated productivity improvements of 10
 times, while  maintaining  identical  clock  cycle  performance.  The  Java
 programming language specification of the FPU was compiled into RTL Verilog
 using Forge.
 Both  the  automatically  generated  Verilog  code  from  Forge  and  Sun's
 hand-coded  Verilog  were  then  run  through Synopsys's design compiler to
 perform logic synthesis using identical synthesis  scripts.  The  resulting
 hardware  implementation  demonstrated  area  metrics that were 11 per cent
 less than a hand-coded implementation and timing metrics that  were  within
 15 per cent.
 Don Davis, director of engineering, noted: "We address the  EDA  industry's
 biggest headache -- productivity. The Forge compiler allows designers to go
 quickly and directly from software to Verilog."
 Productivity improvements were the result of designing the FPU in the  Java
 programming  language,  which provides a higher level of design abstraction
 than Verilog, coupled with significantly  faster  functional  verification.
 For   example,   the  picoJava  FPU  took  nine  man-months  using  current
 methodologies and just under four weeks using Forge.
 Functional  verification  took  three  minutes  for  the  Java  programming
 language   description   versus  33  hours  for  a  cycle-accurate  Verilog
 simulator. The FPU contains 20,079 lines of Verilog  code.  With  the  Java
 programming  language,  the  same  functionality is described in only 3,487
 lines of code.
 Forge advantages
 Forge technology provides not just the ability  to  generate  synthesizable
 RTL  code  from  a  high-level  software language, but it also provides the
 opportunity to explore a new way  of  thinking  about  hardware  design  by
 leveraging the full power of modern software languages.
 Forge uses proprietary architectural synthesis technology for generation of
 fast,  parallel  efficient  system  architectures. An open-system front end
 allows Forge to  accept  descriptions  written  in  C,  C++  and  the  Java
 programming language.
 Compile times are short and software functional simulation is 100 to  1,000
 times  faster  than  Verilog  RTL simulation. These times are a few minutes
 compared with hours or a few days with a conventional Verilog simulator.
 Industry support for Forge
 "Sun Microsystems has seen a growing number of vendors in EDA adopting Java
 technology  for development of user interfaces," said Kelly Perey, director
 of technical  market  development  at  Sun  Microsystems,  Inc.  "LavaLogic
 represents a new generation of EDA vendor who has seen the benefits of Java
 for building new EDA applications. Sun applauds LavaLogic's  innovation  in
 this area."
 Price and availability
 The Forge design compiler is available now for $100,000 (U.S.).  Forge  has
 been  shipping to beta sites since last year. Production shipments begin in
 June. To register for a beta copy visit www.lavalogic.com.  Forge  runs  on
 the  Sun  Solaris  platform.  NT and Linux versions are planned and will be
 announced later this year.
 LavaLogic was founded in April, 1997, and is financed by and is a  business
 unit  of  TSI  TelSys  Corporation.  Contracts  with  the  Defense Advanced
 Research  Projects  Agency   (DARPA)   partially   finance   research   and
 development. In May, 1999, LavaLogic announced its intent to address design
 productivity with architectural synthesis.
 Contact LavaLogic at 7100 Columbia Gateway Dr., Columbia, Md., 21046, phone
 410-872-3900, fax 410-872-3902, info@lavalogic.com.
 WARNING: The company relies on litigation protection for  "forward-looking"
 statements.
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