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eSOL Licenses ARM Compiler Tools For µITRON Embedded Systems Development Environments
eSOL Licenses ARM Compiler Tools For µITRON Embedded Systems Development Environments
CAMBRIDGE, UK and TOKYO, JAPAN - Feb. 12, 2001 - ARM [(LSE:ARM); (Nasdaq:ARMHY)], the industry's leading provider of 16/32-bit embedded RISC processor solutions, and eSOL Co., Ltd, a leading Japanese provider of µITRON OS, including various middlewares, and the first Japanese component-aware development tools for embedded systems, today announced that eSOL has licensed the ARM® compiler and associated tools and libraries for use in eSOL's eBinder µITRON development environments. eSOL's range of RTOS kernels and associated development products already support a number of microprocessor cores, including the ARM7TDMI® core and the ARM940T[tm] core, and are compliant with the µITRON open standard for RTOS used in embedded systems. This agreement will give developers and engineers a comprehensive range of tools to support ARM Powered® devices that utilize µITRON. By adhering to the µITRON standard, eSOL has developed its eParts® family, offering RTOS 'blocks' from kernel to protocol stack. eBinder® is a comprehensive development environment for use in conjunction with eParts that allows developers to use an intuitive graphical interface for designing embedded systems, making system design considerably quicker and simpler. The ITRON standard acts as a guideline for embedded systems developers, ensuring that the resulting RTOS is scalable across a wide range of embedded systems, deriving the maximum performance from the associated hardware and contributing to improved software productivity. "The µITRON standard is extremely important to embedded system developers and manufacturers in Japan," said Derek Morris, general manager, Development Systems, ARM. "This agreement with eSOL will further strengthen our commitment to providing developers with the best possible tools and support for their ARM Powered solutions, while also supporting other technology standards." "The launch of our eBinder product incorporating ARM core tools into the Japanese market is important for eSOL," said Bob N. Ueyama, Director of eSOL's embedded products division. "ARM's compiler leads the market in both performance and code density, and by incorporating ARM core tools with eBinder, we believe that both current and future eSOL customers will have access to the leading IDE and compiler combination." The ITRON specification was first introduced in 1987, and a later version geared towards 8- and 16-bit systems was released in 1989 as µITRON. µITRON-specification kernels have been developed by the majority of Japanese embedded systems manufacturers, including Hitachi, Mitsubishi, Sony and Toshiba, and have become the de-facto standard in the Japanese market. EDITOR'S NOTES About eSOL About ARM eBinder and eParts are trademarks of eSOL Co., Ltd. ARM, ARM Powered and ARM7TDMI are registered trademarks of ARM Limited. ARM940T and ARM Developer Suite are trademarks of ARM. All other brands or product names are the property of their respective holders. "ARM" is used to represent ARM Holdings plc (LSE: ARM and Nasdaq: ARMHY); its operating company ARM Limited; and the regional subsidiaries ARM INC.; ARM KK; ARM Korea Ltd.; ARM Taiwan; and ARM France SAS.
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