1355 Association Joins Growing List of Standards-Related
Industry Groups to Organize Within the IEEE Industry Standards
and Technology Organization
Piscataway, NJ -- 22 February 2000
The
1355 Association
today announced that it has chosen the IEEE Industry
Standards and Technology Organization (IEEE-ISTO)
to organize and facilitate its efforts to promote
the IEEE 1355-1995 Standard (ISO/IEC 14575) of scalable,
heterogeneous interconnect.
IEEE
1355 is an all-purpose interconnect standard that
defines a set of lightweight serial protocols for
low cost implementation. Networks and other applications
built using IEEE 1355 connect a wide range of devices
through different network topologies using a selection
of compatible protocols. IEEE 1355 connects between
chips, boards or boxes, at speeds ranging from 1Mbit/s
or less, up to 1Gbit/s or more. IEEE 1355 is designed
for short distances, up to a few tens of meters, and
has the silicon costs, and simplicity, of a UART.
The
IEEE-ISTO and the 1355 Association will work in partnership
to further promote the implementation and acceptance
of the IEEE 1355 Standard in the marketplace. The
Association is run according to defined rules and
procedures by a Steering Committee on behalf of its
membership. The 1355 Association disseminates knowledge
of IEEE 1355, and coordinates the activities of producers,
users and research organizations so that the standard
can be fully exploited in appropriate markets.
Users of 1355 come from an extremely wide range of
applications. Paul Walker, Chair of the 1355 Association
said, "The computer industry first used the standard
as a serial packet interface between computer chips.
The space industry started to use it as a reliable
high-speed interface between DSP chips used for image
processing, and then found 1355 appropriate for many
other uses in the spacecraft. Telecommunications and
data communications use 1355 for building scalable,
low-cost and low-latency switching fabric. Industrial
users see it as ideal for building responsive robots.
Others see 1355's low implementation cost, the way
the network bandwidth grows as nodes are added, and
the networks' tolerance of loops (and inexpert users!),
to be ideal characteristics for networks in the home.
This breadth, from space to the home, with plenty
of niches in between, is unique in the interconnect
technology business."
The 1355 Association is currently working in partnership
with the European Space Agency's SpaceWire working
group to develop a derivative of the IEEE 1355 Standard
within the IEEE to meet the space industry's specific
needs for high-speed digital serial links of on-board
data-handling applications.
Additionally,
the 1355 Association is supporting the IEEE Committee's
efforts to update and revise the IEEE 1355 Standard
to address technology advancements since the standard
was first published.
"Our
alliance with the 1355 Association further demonstrates
the complementary relationship between the IEEE Standards
Association (IEEE-SA) and the IEEE-ISTO," said Peter
Lefkin, IEEE-ISTO secretary treasurer and CFO. "The
IEEE 1355 standards development effort will continue
within the IEEE-SA, while the marketing, education,
interoperability and implementation demonstrations,
and peripheral activities in support of the standard,
will be sponsored by the 1355 Association within the
IEEE-ISTO."
The
1355 Association is open to all interested parties.
The 1355 Association has a broad membership, spanning
suppliers of IEEE 1355 products and services, OEM
users of the IEEE 1355 interconnect, and institutes
researching and facilitating the benefits of 1355.
About
the IEEE-ISTO
The
IEEE-ISTO is affiliated with the IEEE and the IEEE-SA.
The IEEE-ISTO is an independent not-for-profit corporation
offering standards-related industry groups an innovative
and flexible operational legal forum and support services.
The IEEE-ISTO facilitates the activities that support
the development, implementation and acceptance of
standards in the marketplace. In addition to the 1355
Association, the Nexus 5001 Forum,
the Medical Device Communications
Industry Group, and the Printer
Working Group, are currently organized as programs
of the IEEE-ISTO.
For
further information about the IEEE-ISTO visit http://www.ieee-isto.org
or contact Peter Lefkin, IEEE-ISTO secretary treasurer
and CFO, at +1 732 981 3434, or ieee-isto@ieee.org.
For
further information about the 1355 Association visit
http://www.1355.org/
or contact Paul Walker, Chair of the 1355 Association,
at +44 1908 566253, or paul@4Links.co.uk.
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