Indian R&D of U.S. giant achieves micro-chip breakthrough

Tuesday, 10 June 2008, 17:43 IST
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Mumbai: The Indian research arm of global semi-conductor manufacturing leader Texas Instruments has achieved a breakthrough: enhancing the processing and memory power of ultra-low power micro-controllers. The breakthrough generation of the ultra-low power micro-controllers can aid thousands of applications in fields as diverse as medicine, security, home automation and consumer goods, the company said Monday. "The new generation micro-controllers will have 50 percent more processing performance and a 100 percent enhancement of memory as compared to previous generations," a spokesperson said. Power consumption has also been brought down, he added. TI (India) business development manager, Shailesh Thakurdesai, said performance of devices like panel meters, 3-phase meters, UPS and inverters, LED lighting, portable ultrasound scanners, electronic thermometers, wind and solar power generators, surveillance equipment and similar gadgets would "be enhanced to quite a considerable extent." Texas Instruments set up a research and development facility in Bangalore in 1985. "Since 2006, the Indian research arm has become the most critical R&D for TI globally," the spokesperson said. The Indian analog semiconductor market is estimated to touch $437 million by 2009.
Source: IANS