Open Core Protocol International Partnership Celebrates Two Year Anniversary
PORTLAND, Ore.—(BUSINESS WIRE)—Dec. 15, 2003—
Open Core Protocol International Partnership (OCP-IP)
celebrates its two-year anniversary in December of 2003. The
association provides a common standard for intellectual property core
interfaces, or Sockets, that facilitate "plug and play" SoC design.
OCP-IP has doubled its membership roster in the past year with
technology leaders like: Alcatel, Amphion, Beach Solutions, Cadence,
CoWare, Hughes, LSI Logic, Micronas, TNI-Valiosys, eInfochips,
Imagination Technologies, STMicroelectronics, and TSMC. Many of the
most prestigious university and SoC research institutions from around
the world also joined, including: UC Berkeley, University of British
Columbia, Tampere University of Technology in Finland, Swedish Royal
Institute of Technology and the Taiwan Science Council. More than
1,000 copies of the specification have already been shipped.
"Typical trade organizations can take several years to see the
growth and adoption that OCP-IP has enjoyed," said Ian Mackintosh,
president of OCP-IP. "Despite a difficult economic climate, OCP-IP has
seen its membership base expand rapidly during its brief two year
history because it offers tremendous ROI to members through the
availability of free tools, training and technical support necessary
to quickly make IP cores OCP-compliant and ready for rapid SoC
integration with other third-party IP."
This past year has seen the timely release of the OCP 2.0
specification, an announcement of a strategic alliance with VSIA
securing joint endorsement of the OCP socket, and the addition of an
OCP compliant IP and EDA library listing featuring some 30 companies
to the groups website. The growing library makes finding OCP compliant
third party IP and EDA support quick and easy.
http://www.ocpip.org/socket/iplibrary
OCP-IP also initiated and led coordination of a webcast with
several other industry organizations including VSIA, Si2, SPIRIT,
Accellera, and the X-Initiative to educate the community regarding the
charters and various differences between each organization.
http://seminar2.techonline.com/~techonline44/nov0703/index.shtml
Early in the year OCP-IP made available OCP compliant
transactional models implemented in SystemC. The models standardize
the way OCP based communication is modeled in various abstraction
levels and are available through the OCP-IP website. www.ocpip.org
OCP-IP hosts six active working groups focusing on Vision,
Specification, System Level Design, Memory Semantics, Verification,
and Marketing in support of the OCP socket.
OCP-IP working groups are managed and maintained by coordinated
efforts of leading industry experts. Members are encouraged to join
and contribute to OCP development. The Specification Working Group has
commenced work on OCP 2.1 which focuses on advanced processor feature
support for both DSP and Embedded applications.
"Open, common IP interfaces, and the ability to reuse IP, are
critical as the industry continues to move forward with increasingly
complex SoC designs," said Mackintosh. "Our very productive working
groups ensure not only a standard for today, but one that will address
future needs as well. We are proud of our accomplishments in our short
but productive history and look forward to many more successful
years."
For more information or a membership application visit
www.ocpip.org.
About OCP-IP
The OCP International Partnership Association, Inc. (OCP-IP) was
announced in December 2001 to promote and support the open core
protocol (OCP) as the complete Socket standard that ensures rapid
creation and integration of interoperable virtual components. OCP-IP's
Governing Steering Committee participants are: Nokia (NYSE:NOK), Texas
Instruments (NYSE:TXN), STMicroelectronics (NYSE:STM), United
Microelectronics Corporation (NYSE:UMC), Sonics, and other industry
leading companies. OCP-IP is a non-profit corporation delivering the
first fully supported, openly licensed core-centric protocol that
comprehensively fulfills system-level integration requirements. The
OCP facilitates IP core reusability and reduces design time and risk,
along with manufacturing costs for SoC designs. VSIA endorses the OCP
Socket, and OCP-IP is an Adoption Group of the VSI Alliance. For
additional background and membership information, visit www.OCPIP.org.
Contact:
OCP-IP
Ian Mackintosh, 650-938-2500 ext. 106
ian@ocpip.org
or
VitalCom
Joe Basques, 650-366- 8212 ext. 202
joe@vitalcompr.com