Austin, Tex.— Freescale Semiconductor’s MPC5567 microcontroller based on the PowerPC core enables fault-tolerant communication at high bandwidth rates of 10Mbit/sec, reducing system cost by ...
FlexRay is still in a very early stage of its entrance into the automotive electronics market. Therefore, many companies and engineering design departments are beginning to evaluate this new ...
AUSTIN, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 21, 2006--Freescale Semiconductor (NYSE:FSL) (NYSE:FSL.B) continues to steer the automotive industry toward safer, more reliable cars with the industry's first ...
FlexRay is an upcoming networking standard being established to raise the data rate, reliability, and safety of the automotive applications of today and tomorrow. Synthesizable FlexRay intellectual ...
After several years of hard work by industry leaders worldwide on the development of the FlexRay communications protocol, the initial automotive applications are starting to become visible on the ...
Freescale Semiconductor's MPC5567 is said to be the industry's first 32-bit microcontroller based on the PowerPC core to offer embedded Flash and integrated FlexRay protocol. It provides ...
Philips and Freescale have agreed to share technologies they have developed for FlexRay, the next-generation high-speed automotive bus standard. The companies will use a common protocol engine, and a ...
Freescale Semiconductor and Royal Philips Electronics both founding members of the FlexRay Consortium, have agreed to share their FlexRay technologies in hopes of shortening time to market for FlexRay ...
Regulatory mandates for features like autonomous emergency braking, lane-keeping assist, blind-spot detection, and rearview cameras are significantly boosting the number of network nodes per vehicle.
According to MarketsandMarkets, the automotive communication protocol market is expected to reach USD 10.32 billion by 2033, from USD 7.77 billion ...
AUSTIN, Texas--May 22, 2006--Freescale Semiconductor continues to steer the automotive industry toward safer, more reliable cars with the industry's first 32-bit microcontroller (MCU) based on the ...
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