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Technology Stocks : Rambus (RMBS) - Eagle or Penguin -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: richard surckla who wrote (29255)9/11/1999 2:14:00 AM
From: richard surckla  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93625
 
If previously posted please excuse...

eet.com

Denali Turbo-charges Rambus; Compaq's
'in'

By Michael Santarini
EE Times
(05/17/99, 9:29 a.m. EDT)

Memory-modeling software provider Denali Software Inc. (Palo Alto, Calif.)
has released its Turbo Channel simulation model for Rambus and announced
that Compaq Computer Corp. is among the first systems houses to license
the technology. Compaq will use the model in the development of
next-generation Alpha processors.

Denali sells Turbo Channel as an option to its RDRAM verification kit, which
it announced in October. According to company president Sanjay
Srivastava, the new technology, which will be sold as an option to the
RDRAM verification kit, models the Rambus channel rather than an
individual memory component and as such will speed systems simulation as
much as 20 times.

Rambus DRAM is a memory subsystem that promises to transfer up to 1.6
billion bytes per second. The subsystem consists of the RAM, the RAM
controller, and the bus that connects the RAM to the microprocessor and
other devices in the computer that use it.

"RDRAM has a new packet-based protocol," said Srivastava. "We created
the new technology so customers could take full advantage of Rambus'
performance. Turbo Channel allows them to build Rambus applications that
are faster, and it offers them better memory-system debugging capabilities."

According to Srivastava, the Turbo Channel model, written in C, implements
techniques for performance optimization when the Rambus Channel being
modeled has many components connected to the channel.

The Turbo Channel model costs $5,000. Denali's RDRAM Verification kit,
with the Turbo Channel model and Denali's AutoTest automatic-test-vector
generation program and debugging software, costs $80,00.

Denali models and tools run on Windows and Unix platforms. See
www.denalisoft.com.

---

Phoenix Technologies Ltd. (San Jose) has introduced a 10/100 Fast
Ethernet medium-access controller (MAC) soft core featuring the Virtual
Component Interface (VCI), a standard bus interface defined by the VSI
Alliance to ease the integration of IP components onto one chip.

The company said the MAC core is the first offering in a planned family of
interconnect cores that will use the VCI standard. The core complies with
IEEE 802.3 and 802.3 specs and supports 10- and 100-Mbit/second data
transfer.

The core also supports both full- and half-duplex modes, offering the
CSMA/CD protocol for half-duplex operation and flow control (IEEE
802.3) for full-duplex operation.

According to Phoenix, the basic functionality of the core is fully implemented
in hardware, eliminating the requirement for software drivers.

Features that are described as extending beyond basic MAC functionality
include station management for PHY control, RMON network-management
support, address filtering, clock synchronization, data handling and
virtual-LAN support.

The company said the core is silicon-proven and undergoing compliance
testing at the University of New Hampshire's Ethernet Interoperability Lab.
Visit www.phoenix.com.