Product category:
Communications ICs (Wired)
News Release from: Texas Instruments (April 2001-March 2006)
Edited by the Electronicstalk Editorial
Team on 01 June 2001
Nineteen IP phone manufacturers select
TI DSP
19 new customers have selected Texas Instruments as their vendor for technologies to rapidly deploy enterprise Internet protocol telephone solutions.
Leveraging the processing performance and low power of Texas Instruments technologies to rapidly deploy enterprise Internet protocol telephone solutions, 19 new customers have selected TI as their vendor The integration of TI's programmable DSPs and Telogy Software products provides the required performance, ultra-low power efficiency and flexibility to execute voice encoding and compression, while saving system costs and reducing overall power consumption
This article was originally published on Electronicstalk on 8 Nov 2004 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
Data buffer has dual multiplexer
Texas Instruments has introduced the industry's first 0- to 4-Gbps data buffer/signal conditioner with a dual multiplexer.
Reference design for wireless optical comms
A new technology from Texas Instruments dramatically cuts the cost and complexity of bringing the high-speed datarates of optical networking to end users.
The new customers include ACT, ADTech, AltiGen Communications, BONA Technology, Cetacean Networks, Telefonica, Global Internet Telephone AG(GITel).
TI now has more than 50 enterprise IP phone customers including 3Com, Ascom, CIDCO, Circa Communications/Polycom, Cisco Systems, congruency, Ericsson, Nortel Networks and TelStrat.
"One of the reasons we chose TI's enterprise IP phone solution is because of the complete integration of TI's programmable DSP technology with TI's Telogy Software products", said Richard De Soto, Chief Marketing Officer of AltiGen Communications.
"The software enables the delivery of better-than-toll-quality voice and the complete solution delivers the programmability into new evolving standards.
It is just what we were looking for as we made our investment in the underlying technology for our AltiServ IP PBX and IP phones".
Enterprise IP phones are one of the most rapidly growing forms of Internet telephony.
In fact, Allied Business Intelligence research predicts that the IP phone market will reach 51.4 million 2005.
And according to a recent study by Phillips InfoTech, IP Local Area Network (LAN) telephony represents the next generation of phone systems.
For most enterprises the decision to implement IP LAN telephony is really a question of 'when' not a question of 'if'.
The potential obstacles most often cited by decision-makers in both large and small enterprises regarding the timeframe for deciding to implement IP LAN telephony are: reliability, voice quality, price and scalability, according to the Phillips InfoTech study.
• Texas Instruments (April 2001-March 2006): contact details and other news
• Email this article to a colleague
• Register for the free Electronicstalk email newsletter
• Electronicstalk Home Page

