By
Stephen Shankland
Wednesday, September 14 2005 10:36 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39254457,00.htm
The venture capital arm of Panasonic's North American operations has
launched an effort to cultivate embedded-Linux start-ups.
The Panasonic Digital Concepts Center, through its newly established
Technology Collaboration Center, is seeking to invest in four to five start-ups
working on Linux technology for embedded computing systems such as consumer
electronics devices. Through the initiative, which was launched Tuesday, the
company will help the start-ups develop technology and find partners.
Panasonic and its Japanese parent, Matsushita, have been keen
on Linux for consumer electronics. The company sells an advanced set-top box and
3G mobile phone that use the open-source operating system; it's also using Linux
in consumer electronics for automobiles and home audiovisual products that are
under development, a company representative said.
Embedded Linux is an active
area of technology development. Wind River, a powerhouse in embedded
technology, now has joined the Linux fray, challenging specialists such as MontaVista
Software and TimeSys.
Another company, FSMLabs, is taking a different approach to embedded Linux,
combining the open-source operating system with its own proprietary one,
RTLinuxPro. The approach is tailored for applications that require very fast "real-time" response.
On Tuesday at the Embedded Systems Conference in Boston, FSMLabs said that
its dual-kernel approach can result in a guaranteed response time of 8
microseconds--or 8 millionths of a second. MontaVista, which uses a Linux-only
approach, has a latency
of 98 microseconds, which the company says is still about 100 times better
than a standard Linux kernel.
FSMLabs announced the speed test on a system using a dual-core Opteron
processor from Advanced Micro Devices.
LynuxWorks, a traditional embedded operating system company that has added a
Linux product, also announced a hybrid approach at the conference. A software
foundation called LynxSecure lets the company's BlueCat, a version of Linux, and LynxOS-178, a proprietary operating system, run in separate partitions on the same computing system.