To: Jeffery E. Forrest who wrote (8530 ) 11/4/1997 2:45:00 PM From: Scrapps Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22053
Hans-Erhard Reiter, Marketing and Sales Manager of Ericsson's Multi-Service Access Division added, "This agreement also involves a collaboration between the three companies to develop a highly advanced Category II ADSL chipset. ADI's and Aware's broadband focus and forward-looking product development will help Ericsson market modems in time to meet windows of opportunity, assuring a higher degree of success in this fast-paced market." With this announcement, Ericsson satifies their immediate procurement requirements for transceiver chipsets. Fully compliant to industry standards (ANSI T1.413, ETSI TR238, ITU G.adsl), the AD20msp910 combines all the functions and essential software required for implementing a complete ADSL modem, including a DMT (Discrete Multi-Tone) co-processor, analog front end, line driver, DSP-based host processor, interface/framer, and all software for both datapump and microcontroller functions. Ericsson joins a growing number of telecommunication systems, data communications, and modem manufacturers already using the ADI/Aware solution. Johnsen added, "We feel that now, because major players such as Ericsson, Ascend Communications, DSC Communications, Hayes Microcomputer Products, Pairgain Technologies, Philips, and others have adopted a standards-based chipset, global interoperability between subscriber-side modems and telecom service providers is assured. Am I confused and not understanding this?..."and others have adopted a standards-based chipset ". It doesn't say all these companies are using the AWRE/ADI chipset does it? It only says they all are using standards-based chipsets....right?aware.com The first part I marked at the top in bold is good for AWRE/ADI, I don't know if that had been highlighted or discussed before.