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Product category: Communications ICs (Wired)
News Release from: Texas Instruments (April 2001-March 2006)
Edited by the Electronicstalk Editorial Team on 02 March 2004

Templeton looks to wireless future

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Wireless has become the most important platform in consumer electronics and will be a primary focal point for innovation in coming years, says Rich Templeton, TI's Chief Operating Officer.

Wireless has become the most important platform in consumer electronics and will be a primary focal point for innovation in coming years, says Rich Templeton, Chief Operating Officer for Texas Instruments In a keynote address at the 3GSM World Congress, Templeton went on to say: "Wireless technology provides a low-cost, low-power platform to make it practical to expand the value of a cellphone beyond voice"

"We're not far from the day when smartphones are projected to outsell laptop and desktop computers combined.

Last year, cameraphones became the best selling cameras outpacing digital still cameras, which themselves surpassed film cameras for the first time".

Templeton predicted that cellphones soon would become the prevailing devices worldwide for accessing the Internet, listening to music, capturing and watching video, and for organising personal information.

However, Templeton stressed that application-specific devices such as digital still cameras, digital audio players and many others still have a bright future in their own right.

"Some people will exclusively rely on smartphones that deliver everything, but most people will use both multifunction cellphones and dedicated devices as their preferences and situations dictate".

Using real applications and advanced cellphones that are commercially available from TI customers, TI demonstrated streaming video, fingerprint authentication and 3D gaming enabled by the first-generation of OMAP processors.

The company also showed how advanced cellphones can transmit images directly to a television via Bluetooth networking, allowing information from the phones to appear on large-screen displays.

A new handset was shown that integrates multiple TI technologies including an OMAP processor and GPRS, Bluetooth and 802.11 connections.

The handset enables simultaneous web browsing while conducting a GPRS voice call using a Bluetooth headset.

Templeton said the deployment of second-generation processors, known as OMAP 2 and announced earlier in the week, will enable even higher-quality consumer applications on the wireless platform.

For example, OMAP 2 processors increase video performance by 4X and 3D graphics capability by 40x compared with prior versions.

Templeton said these "demonstrations are evidence of the velocity in GSM and wireless overall.

It took about 10 years to really develop digital voice and sleek form factors.

Cameraphones have become very popular in just two years, and we'll see the same thing happen with other features such as videophones and digital TV in just one year".

To help customers make the most of new capabilities, TI has opened a wireless applications centre in Villeneuve-Loubet, France, the company's fourth such centre worldwide where customers and network operators can learn about new wireless technology and see it in action.

Templeton also revealed that TI has successfully made the world's first GSM cellular phone call using digital RF technology.

With TI's new digital RF processor successfully making calls, the company's next step is to absorb this function into the company's integrated digital baseband for wireless communications.

"When you move the digital radio into the baseband, you cut power consumption, cost and board space all in half", Templeton said.

"In a smartphone, this will open up valuable space for new applications and functions and increase performance".

Continued integration to a single-chip solution, Templeton said, will make wireless phones affordable for more people worldwide.

"In just a few years, more than two billion people will rely on cellphones for voice calling, and hundreds of millions will use smartphones to make their lives more convenient, productive, secure and fun", Templeton said.

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