29.01.2008 15:00:00
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National Instruments Joins The Multicore Association to Improve Interoperability of Multicore-Enabled Software and Hardware
National Instruments (Nasdaq: NATI) today announced it has joined The
Multicore Association, a global nonprofit organization focused on
developing standards that help shorten time to market for products that
involve multicore implementations. As a member of the association,
National Instruments is collaborating with leading technology companies
including Intel, Freescale Semiconductor and Wind River to improve the
interoperability among operating systems, hardware and software
development tools so engineers and scientists can benefit from the
performance improvements offered by multicore technology.
"National Instruments has a commanding and
diverse knowledge of multicore technology from a software, hardware and
operating system perspective,” said Markus
Levy, president of The Multicore Association. "Their
experience and leadership in developing products that can take advantage
of this technology makes National Instruments a valuable contributor to
The Multicore Association’s efforts to define
the standards for multicore applications.”
National Instruments offers more than 30 years of technology leadership
to the association as well as significant experience supporting and
using multicore technology through products such as NI
LabVIEW graphical development software. With more than 10 years of
investment in multithreading technology, LabVIEW simplifies multicore
and FPGA-based application development with its intuitive parallel
dataflow language. LabVIEW also delivers symmetric multiprocessing (SMP)
with the LabVIEW Real-Time
environment, making it possible for users to gain performance from
multicore processors without sacrificing determinism. Customers using
LabVIEW graphical programming to take advantage of multicore technology
include the NASA Ames Research Center for wind tunnel control, Max
Planck Institute for nuclear fusion research, Eaton Corporation for
transmission testing and Virginia Tech University and Torc Technologies
for developing autonomous vehicle vision intelligence. Additionally,
National Instruments incorporates multicore processors into several of
its hardware offerings including modular
instruments available on PXI, PXI
Express, PCI, PCI Express
and PCMCIA platforms for increased performance.
"The change to multicore programming is as
revolutionary as the transition to object-oriented programming was two
decades ago, and LabVIEW is ideally suited for this new challenge,”
said Dr. James Truchard, National Instruments president, CEO and
cofounder. "National Instruments already has
invested 10 years in the multithreading technology in LabVIEW, and its
parallel, dataflow approach is ideal for engineers and scientists
building multicore applications. We look forward to working with The
Multicore Association to define the standards for multicore applications.”
Readers can visit www.ni.com/multicore
for multicore programming resources including webcasts and white papers
presented by National Instruments, Intel, The Multicore Association, QNX
Software Systems and the University of California, Berkeley.
About National Instruments
National Instruments (www.ni.com) is
transforming the way engineers and scientists design, prototype and
deploy systems for measurement, automation and embedded applications. NI
empowers customers with off-the-shelf software such as NI LabVIEW and
modular cost-effective hardware, and sells to a broad base of more than
25,000 different companies worldwide, with no one customer representing
more than 3 percent of revenue and no one industry representing more
than 10 percent of revenue. Headquartered in Austin, Texas, NI has more
than 4,500 employees and direct operations in nearly 40 countries. For
the past nine years, FORTUNE magazine has named NI one of the 100 best
companies to work for in America. Readers can obtain investment
information from the company’s investor
relations department by calling (512) 683-5090, e-mailing nati@ni.com
or visiting www.ni.com/nati.
About The Multicore Association
The Multicore Association provides a neutral forum for vendors who are
interested in, working with and/or proliferating multicore-related
products, including processors, infrastructure, devices, software and
applications. Currently, the organization is set up with three working
groups: Communications API (CAPI), Debug API and Hypervisor API for the
support of virtual machine environments. Members include ARC
International, Codeplay, Enea, eSOL, Freescale Semiconductor, Imperas,
Intel, Mentor Graphics, MIPS Technologies, National Instruments, NEC
Electronics America, Nokia Siemens Networks, PolyCore Software, QNX
Texas Instruments, Tilera, the University of York, and Wind River.
LabVIEW, National Instruments, NI and ni.com are trademarks of
National Instruments. Other product and company names listed are
trademarks or trade names of their respective companies.
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