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To: John Rieman who wrote (33474)5/27/1998 7:57:00 PM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50808
 
Equator: Media processor startup backed by Hitachi and Canon.........

Hitachi, Canon back U.S. media-processor startup

By Junko Yoshida

SEATTLE - Equator Technologies Inc., a media-processor startup, has
identified Hitachi, Canon and SNK, a Japanese arcade-game developer, as
its corporate partners. Equator named its partners at its formal introduction
here on Wednesday.

Equator is a fabless semiconductor company designing a family of VLIW
(very long instruction-word) processors for a wide range of digital consumer
products. The first targets digital TV, set-top boxes and 3-D interactive
games.


The startup comes with deep roots and experience in the VLIW
architecture. Equator was co-founded by John Setel O'Donnell, who in the
mid-1980s was a co-founder and chief architect at Multiflow Computer
Inc., the defunct supercomputer company that pioneered its own VLIW
processors.

Equator, which began business in 1990 as a consulting firm for
supercomputer companies such as Fujitsu and NEC, was restarted in 1996
as a fabless chip company with a focus on the digital consumer market.

Working closely with its corporate partners to develop applications for its
VLIW processor, Equator today is finalizing its silicon structure by
simulating algorithm-processor interactions.

The startup doesn't yet have working silicon, and doesn't expect to ship its
chip in volume until the fourth quarter of 1999.
But O'Donnell, Equator's
president, promised that the development system - including silicon, board
and software - will be in its partners' hands before the end of this year.
O'Donnell also stressed that Equator will be making tools available to let
OEMs code software for its VLIW processor completely in C, not a
combination of C and assembly language.
"Our goal is to allow consumer
companies to develop their own software for this highly parallel processor,
with the lowest possible software development pain."

Furthermore, Equator has set one hefty goal as its corporate mission: "to
replace today's consumer-electronics systems by a unified programmable
platform," according to the Equator president.

In O'Donnell's view, many newly emerging consumer products consist of "a
light RISC-type microprocessor and a collection of ASICs." That model is
fine "as long as the DTV system defined by the Advanced Television
Systems Committee lasts for the next 30 years," he said. But in a world
driven by the Internet, with a new multimedia framework like MPEG-4 on
the horizon, nothing is fixed. Newer and better codecs are showing up
constantly, he said.

"There is a huge misfit between what the current ASIC-based hardware
could offer consumer-electronics vendors and where the world is going,"
said O'Donnell. "Our mission is to provide consumer-electronics companies
with an architecture that can span camcorders to HDTV."

To achieve that goal, the company will eventually need to launch a family of
specialized VLIW processors, instead of a single processor that fits all. Still,
said O'Donnell, "system designers can develop a wide range of digital
systems that can run on the same C code."

Because the company's VLIW processor architecture is closely tied to
applications, the close collaboration with its corporate partners is essential.
Among those partners, Hitachi has been involved with Equator on three
fronts: joint development of VLIW processor architecture; porting
Hitachi-developed DTV All Format Decoding (AFD) software for the
processor; and serving as a fab for the device.

The relationship dates back to 1994, when Hitachi's Information Systems
Development Lab in Yokohama, Japan, started a joint project with Equator
to develop the startup's VLIW architecture. "Hitachi shares some IPs
[intellectual property] in this," noted O'Donnell.

Meanwhile, software-based AFD algorithm, developed by Hitachi
America's Research and Development Division (Princeton, N.J.), will
become one of the key software applications running on the Equator
processor. In fact, the AFD algorithm could turn the VLIW processor into a
very flexible DTV platform for consumer-electronics system vendors, the
companies said.

Equator is the second company to announce the use of AFD on its DTV
silicon solution. The other is Intel Corp., which is porting AFD to its
Pentium, with a goal to make PCs capable of decoding all 18 formats of the
U.S. digital TV standard without adding a special MPEG-2 Main Profile @
High Level processor.


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