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Intel, Motorola, Texas Instruments and ARM to Kickstart ARM Powered(R) Innovation
Sydney, July 25, 2001 Consistent with its strategy
to fuel innovation and broaden the market for Palm Powered(R)
devices, Palm, Inc. (Nasdaq: PALM) today announced that key
suppliers of ARM(R) corebased technology have joined
its new Palm OS(R) Ready Program. Intel Corporation (Nasdaq:
INTC) and Motorola (NYSE: MOT) will produce reference designs,
and Texas Instruments Incorporated (NYSE:TXN) (TI) will develop
a wireless processing platform, optimised to support the Palm
OS platform via a development license with Palm. The Palm
OS Ready Program is intended to strengthen the Palm OS licensing
strategy in the multimedia and wireless device markets as
well as assist licensees in bringing innovative ARM corebased
devices to market more quickly.
Intel will provide Intel(R) StrongARM and Intel(R) XScale(TM)
Palm OS Ready solutions, Motorola will provide DragonBall
MX1 Palm OS Ready solutions, and TI will provide OMAP(TM)
platform Palm OS Ready solutions. ARM will work closely with
Palm to ensure that the Palm OS migrates smoothly to the ARM
architecture and that ARM development tools are optimised
to support the Palm OS platform.
By licensing components of the Palm OS platform to silicon
solution providers, Palm is enabling them to provide more
complete processor solutions to licensees of the Palm OS platform.
This should save licensees development time, freeing them
to focus technical resources on innovative differentiation
based on their own areas of expertise. In addition, it is
anticipated that new segments of developers will use these
extended device capabilities to join the more than 160,000
developers in the Palm Economy. Users of Palm Powered devices
should benefit by having more innovative devices from which
to choose, and having them available sooner.
"As the worldwide leader in providing the software platform
for handheld, mobile and wireless devices, Palm is accelerating
the choices and levels of innovation available," said
Alan Kessler, vice president and general manager of Palm's
Platform Solutions Group. "We are setting a new agenda
for our industry that should result in more innovation and
quicker development of ARM corebased Palm Powered devices."
"This new program is a good move for Palm because it
should both shorten the time to market for device makers and
expand the total number of copies of Palm OS in use,"
said Al Gillen, research manager, system software at International
Data Corp. (IDC). "More copies of an operating system
in use translates to a bigger market for application vendors."
Palm OS Ready Partners
All Palm OS Ready Program partners are market leaders in the
semiconductor space. This caliber of industry luminaries strengthens
the entire Palm Economy.
Intel
As a member of the Palm OS Ready Program, Intel will bring
years of systems experience to its new collaboration with
Palm. Intel will work with Palm to optimise the Palm OS device
abstraction layer (DAL) for the Intel StrongARM and Intel
XScalebased processors to increase multimedia performance
for Palm Powered devices.
"The Palm OS commands a substantial presence in the handheld
market segment," said Peter Green, general manager of
Intel's Handheld Computing Division. "Intel's highperforming,
lowpower processors and Intel StrataFlash(R) memory,
when coupled with Palm OS, make for a compelling and powerful
platform. Palm OS licensees and the broad base of Palm developers
will be able to take advantage of the full benefits of Intel
StrongARM and Intel XScale technology."
Motorola
As the No. 1 supplier of microprocessors for handheld computers,
Motorola will work with Palm to optimise the Palm OS device
abstraction layer (DAL) for the Motorola DragonBall MX family
to meet the needs of Palm Powered devices.
"Motorola's DragonBall family has been at the forefront
of the rapidly growing portable devices market with Palm's
products for six years," said Omid Tahernia, vice president
and general manager of Motorola's Wireless and Mobile Systems
Division.
"Motorola's wireless embedded solutions have been the
backbone of the phenomenal success of mobile products over
the past decade. But the most compelling part is only beginning
to take shape. Our ARM corebased DragonBall MX family
leverages our systemonchip expertise to meet converging
needs for wireless and multimedia applications."
Texas Instruments
"The combination of Palm's expertise in handheld solutions
and Texas Instruments' clear leadership in wireless technology
will offer a strong solution for manufacturers designing nextgeneration
wireless devices," said Jeff McCreary, senior vice president
of marketing and sales for Texas Instruments. "By leveraging
the Palm OS platform with TI's highperformance, lowpower
OMAP architecture, OEMs will deliver a better, easier and
more fulfilling wireless multimedia experience to consumers
worldwide."
As an extension of its strategy to support a wide variety
of programming languages, wireless industry standards and
platforms, TI expects to offer Palm OS Ready solutions based
on the OMAP platform to major Palm licensees. Introduced in
May 1999, TI's OMAP architecture is an open platform that
delivers the required performance and low power to enable
realtime communicationsbased applications. The
OMAP platform has quickly become the de facto standard for
2.5 and 3G wireless devices and is also supported by a broad
network of developers who design popular applications, including
multimedia, security, mcommerce, gaming and location
based services.
ARM
Palm and ARM (LSE: ARM, Nasdaq: ARMHY) are working together
to migrate the Palm OS platform to ARM silicon solutions and
collaborate on future roadmaps to bring to market technologies
that should lead to exciting and innovative handheld and wireless
Palm OS solutions.
"ARM has significant expertise in the wireless and handheld
device markets due to our industryleading lowpower
and highperformance microprocessor cores," said
Reynette Au, vice president, corporate marketing, ARM. "We
are committed to enable our silicon partners to design innovative
ARM corebased wireless solutions that run industryproven
operating systems such as the Palm OS platform."
Silicon Porting Kit
Through licensing of the Silicon Porting Kit, Palm is providing
access to certain components of the Palm OS to the Palm OS
Ready partners. The kit is designed to ease the transfer of
the Palm OS platform to the respective processors, enabling
suppliers to quickly satisfy demand from Palm OS platform
licensees. The kit will include a device abstraction layer,
a hardware abstraction layer, tools, required Palm OS components,
technical resources, training, support and access to marketing
opportunities.
About Palm, Inc.
Palm, Inc. is a pioneer in the field of mobile and wireless
Internet solutions and a leading provider of handheld computers,
according to IDC (December 2000). Based on the Palm OS®
platform, Palm's handheld solutions allow people to carry
and access their most critical information with them wherever
they go. Palm(TM) handhelds address the needs of individuals,
enterprises and educational institutions through thousands
of application solutions.
The Palm OS platform is also the foundation for products from Palm's licensees and strategic partners, such as Franklin Covey, HandEra (formerly TRG), Handspring, IBM, Kyocera, Sony, and Symbol Technologies. Platform licensees also include Acer, Garmin, Nokia and Samsung. The Palm Economy is a growing global community of industry-leading licensees, world-class OEM customers, and more than 160,000 innovative developers and solution providers that have registered to develop solutions based on the Palm OS platform. Palm went public on March 2, 2000. Its stock is traded on the Nasdaq national market under the symbol PALM. More information is available at www.palm.com
Palm OS is a registered trademark, and Palm is a trademark of Palm, Inc. or its subsidiaries.
