New technological advancements in the telecommunications industry have put Comcast in the position to bring more services at better process to their customers. Prices on Comcast phone service have gotten so low in fact that many of the services that you are now currently paying for with your present phone service provider are now absolutely free at Comcast.

Comcast now charges nothing for all twelve of your phone convenience features including voice mail, call waiting and caller ID. What’s really exciting though is that Comcast now has free long distance calling in the U.S. and Canada including Alaska and that’s twenty four hours a day, seven days a week.

Comcast’s entire phone system is digital now, so using it is a breeze, with trouble free call placing and crystal clear reception. It’s a flat rate phone system, so you pay only one reasonable fee and that is all and you then use your phone as much as you want to call where ever you want. Technological conveniences just keep on coming and Comcast is always taking a good look at them, so you can count on more new surprises from Comcast in the future with regards to phone services.

Comcast’s new broadband high speed internet service is as far as you can go technologically in this day and age. It’s simply the fastest internet service that is available right now and speed is everything on the internet. To start with there is no waiting time to log on with Comcast’s high speed cable internet service, because you are always logged on, so you can simply sit down at your computer and just go to work.

If you are currently using a standard dial up internet service then you most likely aren’t doing a whole lot with your computer, because you have to sit at it for hours on end to get it do even the simplest of tasks. Comcast broadband high speed cable internet service is a full one hundred times faster than standard dial up, so what takes you an hour to do, you can now get done in about half a minute with cable high speed.

It’s the little things that matter most though and all those little frustrating waits that you have to endure now will just vanish. With Comcast broadband high speed internet service you can move through the internet from point of interest to point of interest instantly with the click of your mouse.

Comcast is still the leading TV programming service provider and yes they have plenty of high definition channels for you to choose from. Comcast has just recently completed several system upgrades and they now offer the latest technology in several areas of TV programming. Only cable can bring you on demand pay per view and only Comcast has your choice of two on demand pay per view services.

With one service you get all hundreds of great movie choices brought to you each and every month and with Comcast Premium on demand pay per view you get the latest movie releases to pick and choose from. Comcast now has two-hundred and seventy-five channels for you to choose from and you will be hard pressed to find more channels any where. The great thing about getting all of your services from Comcast is discount pricing and convenient billing because all of your services are covered by one simple to understand monthly bill.

Now Comcast has Digital phone service and broadband high speed cable service along with their cable TV programming service. This is not like those group marketing schemes that so many telecommunications service providers are offering now, because Comcast handles all of these service in house, so you will always be dealing with Comcast.

Comcast has implemented the very latest technology in to their service infrastructure to provide these services, so they have great savings that comes with the new efficiency that they can now pass on to you the customer. It’s called bundled services and when you subscribe to any of these Comcast services you only receive one bill at the end of each month that includes all of the service that you are receiving in one fee that you pay.

The savings on their flat fee phone service are phenomenal, because you get so many of the features and services that you are now paying for, free of charge from Comcast. This includes free nation wide long distance calling anywhere in the U.S. and Canada including Alaska. Comcast also gives you all of your standard phone convenience features free of charge including call forwarding, caller ID and voice mail.

Call placing is always flawless now that their entire phone system is digital and this also means perfect voice clarity during conversations on both ends of the line. Flat fee means that there are never any phone bill surprises with Comcast and you always know exactly what your phone bill is each month.

For TV programming service you can get no more reliable a signal then with a solid cable connection and only cable can deliver on demand pay per view. Comcast now has two-hundred and seventy-five channels in their repertoire and you won’t find close to that number of channels with any other service provider.

Comcast has a wide variety of well blended programming packages for you to select from and while cable providers always have the cheapest entry level packages Comcast has the cheapest of them all. Comcast is broadcast in an entirely digital format and that means that you will always have a perfectly clear picture and sound on your TV every time that you turn it on.

Comcast also has a wide variety of high definition channels for you to choose from in their great high definition programming package. Broadband high speed internet service is the latest technology in internet service and Comcast now provides it for their family of customers.

If you are still using a standard dial up service then you may as well be in the Stone Age with regards to your internet service provider, because you’re standard dial up service is one-hundred times slower than Comcast broadband high speed cable internet service. Even DSL is six times slower than the service Comcast now provides and this new speed means that you can do so much more with your computer on the internet.

With this type of speed there is no waiting time, because everything just happens with the click of the mouse. So many things that were inaccessible on the internet with your standard dial up service are now there for you. Comcast also has a toll free twenty-four hour a day customer service number you can call if you have any questions about any of the services that they provide and there is always someone there waiting to help you.

Featuring dual-CPU processor core, Advanced PayloadPlus(TM) 2200 (APP2200) enables network equipment vendors to deliver multi-service business gateways that support converged voice and data functions such as VoIP, VPN, inspection firewalls, application-aware QOS, and print servers in single scalable architecture. It includes packet processor, integrated classifier, traffic manager, security engine, and dual-core control and services processor, and can accommodate from 5 to more than 500 users.

MILPITAS, Calif., May 21 - LSI Corporation (NYSE:LSI) today announced a new generation of advanced communication processors, the Advanced PayloadPlus(TM) 2200 (APP2200). The APP2200 portfolio extends the market for the LSI processor technology beyond its traditional core, edge, and access applications and into the multi-service business gateways. APP2200 enables networking providers with the most powerful multi-service business gateway solutions serving the small-and-medium business (SMB) and remote branch office (RBO) markets.

With increased demand for high-bandwidth and real-time services to businesses, networking providers are being forced to transition from older, general-purpose processor designs to more powerful communication processor-based systems. The APP2200 portfolio delivers the right features and performance to enable cost effective and scalable solutions for SMB and RBO gateways that meet the demands for reliable real-time voice, video and security services.

“The LSI APP2200 portfolio is the cornerstone for complete breakthrough multi-service business gateway solutions targeted at SMB and RBO market. LSI is setting a new industry benchmark for cost-performance and network convergence by bringing its carrier-class technology and expertise to this high-growth market,” said Ghassan Habelrih, vice president of marketing, Network and Storage Products Group, LSI.

Linley Gwennap, principal analyst, The Linley Group, noted, “The APP2200 combines a proven, fast-path architecture with a powerful dual-CPU processor core that can handle voice, security, and other applications. By integrating these features into a single chip, the APP2200 is well positioned to meet the needs of SMB and RBO gateways at an attractive price point.”

The total addressable market for multi-service business gateways in 2007 is expected to be $600 million and grow to more than $2 billion by 2010(1).

The APP2200 portfolio enables network equipment vendors to deliver multi-service business gateways that support converged voice and data functions such as Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP), virtual private networks (VPN), state-full inspection firewalls, Gigabit Ethernet LAN switches, application-aware QOS, network-attached storage (NAS) and print servers in a single scalable architecture. This portfolio processes data at up to 3 Gigabits per second-approximately 10 times faster than alternative solutions.

Communication processors, which have been widely used in the carrier telecom infrastructure, are spawning new applications in the SMB and RBO gateway market. The APP2200 portfolio makes it possible for content and network service providers to deliver next-generation services over a single and unified service provider, business and home network with maximum reliability, higher quality, and higher bandwidth.

The APP2200 portfolio is built on a single architecture with a complete software solution for all applications, accommodating a user range from 5 to more than 500. The APP2200 portfolio offers an unprecedented level of integration including a dedicated packet processor, integrated classifier, traffic manager, security engine, voice processing, and a high-performance dual-core control and services processor.

As a part of the LSI TrueONE(TM) solution, the APP2200 portfolio enables a single hardware architecture to scale from low-end SMB to high-end enterprise gateway solutions. This high level of feature availability and integration combined with a complete application software package allows customers to deliver a higher level of gateway functionality at low Bill of Materials (BOM) costs.

ATLANTA–The field of established, smaller communications IC players around the world can only hope Intel and Infineon wipe each other out in their quest for communications dominance because, judging by their stated intentions during last week’s Supercomm show here, they are serious.

“We’re a quiet giant in communications,” said Thomas Seifert, senior VP and general manager of Infineon’s Communications business group. “We’ve got a different momentum than any other company in this space because we’ve aligned ourselves with the leaders … with Cisco, with Alcatel, with Huawei and ZTE in China. We’re a one-stop shop and our internal capacity is a very strong selling point. Once volume picks up,

Referring to Intel, Seifert said the microprocessor giant needs to watch out for Infineon. “We’re preparing a very serious move this year deeper into communications,” Seifert said. He and other executives, Cherie A. De Lacy and Christian Scherp, sat down with Electronic News at the show.

Infineon is manufacturing on 300mm wafers in Dresden, Germany, and Taiwan and is ready for 300mm in Richmond, Va., and Singapore, he said. This capacity will turn out CMOS and silicon germanium (SiGe) transceivers for speeds up to 40Gbits/sec. and reams and reams of xDSL silicon, he said.

De Lacy is Infineon’s new VP of business operations for communications products in North America. She has 22 years in the industry, most recently with Texas Instruments and with Mitsubishi, where she concentrated on Cisco. Scherp is VP of marketing at Infineon’s optical networking business unit and helps run Infineon’s optical network R&D in San Jose.

This year Intel got very serious about optics, too, with acquisitions and key venture investments. That put Infineon on notice. “We’re not dismissing Intel,” Seifert said. “They are a dangerous competitor, and we take them very seriously. Anybody with $50 billion in cash you have to take seriously.

“But are they established? Not yet,” he added. “We are watching PMC-Sierra, AMCC, Broadcom, Globespan, Agilent and, on the fiber optic side, Agere. Intel has what we call a ‘me too’ strategy, and that’s not going to work.”

Intel will tell you different. The company is definitely putting its considerable money where its marketing is. “It’s like a bike race,” said Anthony Ambrose, director of marketing for the Intel Communications group. “You gain position going up the hill. And Intel is going to do that. Now, we’ve got a couple of years of heavy climbing ahead of us; we’re clearly in a heavy-lifting phase in the industry right now, but we’ll pass the other riders,” he said. “We’re the guy in the yellow jersey. Watch him,” he added.

Intel is obviously intense in its determination to rule communications, even if it lags behind Infineon. Last week the company talked up its 90nm process technology and its plan to see that Intel can engineer-design and manufacture — all manner of communications-ready megachips of 50 million transistors and more.

The company sees this manufacturing node giving it the transistor budget for communications interfaces, essentially for free. “There are thousands and thousands of people touching this program,” said Eric Mentzer, VP and CTO of the Intel Communications group. “Ninety nanometer represents the merging of computing and communications ICs. This will be the unifying technology for us,” he said. R&D is working furiously, he added, to see that Intel can design and manufacture digital and analog, including their different voltage requirements, on the same huge single die.

The company estimates it has spent $20 billion on its current logic capacity, and it is loudly promising excellent return on investor capital from its devotion to communications. Communications accounted for 17 percent of 2001 revenue, which was an aweinspiring $27 billion dollars, or about three times the size of its next-largest competitor. There has been some question of whether the inclusion of Intel’s flash memory products in that figure makes for a fair comparison, but, still, the presence is substantial. Infineon’s sales figures totaled about $1.3 billion on communications products last year, or about a third of its overall revenue.

For companies that support numerous remote and home office locations, finding a cost-effective, reliable and flexible way to link all of their workers becomes a chief concern. In addition to cost-effectiveness, a good telecommunications soon needs to be simple to manage-making adds, moves and changes easy to maintain-and it must offer flexibility for future growth.

For inChord Communications in Columbus, Ohio, a leading marketing communications firm for the pharmaceutical industry, these considerations led it to choose an Internet pro(IP) communications solution to support its nine worldbranch offices, as well as its corporate headquarters.

“Our move from a traditional private branch exchange (PBX) to an IP telephony solution was set in motion,” says Sean Burke, director of network operations, “when we consolidated three offices into a single headquarters location, and then later expanded our Saratoga Springs, N.Y., branch office by 40%. Since expanding and managing the current PBX system be expensive and time consuming, we looked for alternative solutions, deciding on an Internet protocol communications option from Cisco Systems, the ICS 7750, because it offered a single, convenient telephony and services platform It specifically for the bandwidth and administrative needs of branch and midsize offices.”

The solution chosen by inChord offers call processing and voice applications, along with multiservice IP routing in a single integrated platform. It connects with switches situated throughout the office, which, in turn, connect via Ethernet to the LAN that links the desktop computers, servers and IP phones at the location. The switches are responsible for prioritizing the packets of information being transferred along the network, known as quality of service, so that voice packets quality. Outside the LAN, the system connects to an AT&T frame relay network via a fractional T-1 circuit to link with the wider communications network.

Communications systems linking numerous offices need to offers seamless networking, regardless of each location’s technology, Burke adds. IP technology, for instance, can be used at branch locations, but the headquarters location could opt to remain on a circuit-switched PBX system. Or, as in the case of the Cisco product, he says, the IP system can work alongside a PBX system at the same location.

“Additional considerations we examined include ease of maintenance, simple additions and moves for extensions, and cost effectiveness, Burke explains.

“VoIP systems feature telephone equipment that hooks into a personal computer, reducing the need for additional telephone cabling and exploiting the existing computer network,” he adds. “This feature has proven to be a bonus for future growth and expansion, since there is no need to add bays and cards as in a PBX system. In addition, our IP system is easy to roll out in new sites, allowing rapid deployment with ‘cookie-cutter’ configurations.”

Burke also cites easy maintenance of the VoIP system, with some recent system changes made by the company’s IT team using the system-management Web browser on a laptop computer by dialing up the network from a remote location.

“The equipment has proven to be cost-effective,” Burke says, “since it reduces the need for additional phone cabling and allows for fast expansion. For instance, adding extensions to a PBX system requires additional wiring, whereas the IP telephony system can just use the new network data ports for its phone ports.

“Changing extensions in a PBX system requires on-site personnel to punch down new wiring,” he continues, “whereas this IP telephony system allows the IT team to make changes remotely through a Web-driven interface. In addition, the platform allows simple system upgrades to add new features all in the original chassis.” Burke estimates that the IP system saves $100 each time an extension is changed, moved or added.

Grant Masom has become Non-Executive Chairman of in-home communications technology company SiConnect
Related stories

Association shares chipmaking expertise
SiConnect is the first powerline communications chipmaker to join the UK National Microelectronics Institute

Powerline comms joins the IPTV world
IPTV World Forum demonstration shows the ease with which IPTV data can be distributed throughout the home via the domestic electrical wiring circuit

The move coincides with the launch of SiConnect’s first digital powerline transceiver product for in-home multimedia networking. With 20 years senior executive experience, Masom brings to SiConnect extensive knowledge of a broad range of telecomms, networking and IT service sectors. Over the last 8 years, he has worked as a Non-Executive Director and Chairman with 12 early and later stage technology companies in UK and international markets.

He joins the SiConnect board with immediate effect and will work alongside CEO Trevor Sokell.

As Chairman with Amino Technologies, Masom guided the company from being a prerevenue startup through to a position of worldwide leadership in the fast growing IPTV market and an IPO on the AIM market.

He currently holds Non-Executive Chairmanships at Comunica Holdings and TIS Software.

‘It’s clear to me that SiConnect is offering a truly cutting edge technology to a sector that’s set to offer tremendous growth opportunities’, said Masom: ‘I look forward to working with the great team at SiConnect and helping them achieve the success that’s due’.

SiConnect CEO Trevor Sokell commented: ‘At this stage in SiConnect’s evolution it’s very important for us to strengthen the board of directors to ensure we maximise all of our growth potential’.

Nu Horizons Electronics Corp has expanded its five-year Americas partnership agreement with Marvell Semiconductor to cover India
Related stories

Nu Horizons to represent Pericom in UK
Pericom Semiconductor, a supplier of interface systems focussing on enabling serial connectivity, has extended its existing US franchise agreement with Nu Horizons into the UK

DT figures in rationalised distributor network
DT Electronics is to distribute a comprehensive range of components and modules for low-cost, industrial wireless networks as a result of landing the UK franchise for RF Monolithics

In addition to the North and South America, this partnership now includes demand creation and fulfillment for all Marvell transceiver, communications, power management and storage solutions within the Indian market. Marvell’s diverse product portfolio includes switching, transceiver, communications controller, wireless, and storage solutions powering a vast range of consumer electronics, in addition to gateways forming the connectivity backbone of today’s digital lifestyle for enterprise, metro, home and storage networking.

Wendell Boyd, President of Nu Horizons Electronics Asia, states: ‘Marvell is a recognised technology leader in silicon solutions for Ethernet switching and routers’.

‘Their technologies are a great addition to our regional line card’.

Echelon Corp and 4HomeMedia unveiled their award winning collaboration at the International Consumer Electronics Show 2007
Related stories

Power-line transceiver chip for home automation
A power-line smart transceiver allows manufacturers to create networked home-control products that install automatically when plugged into a wall

Design contest for energy efficient computing
A $10,000 contest will reward designers who can find the best way to use control and sensing networks to develop green systems and products to help reduce energy consumption and carbon emissions

(CES). The initial product resulting from the collaboration - 4HomeMedia’s ControlPoint 1000 residential hub reference design for original equipment manufacturer (OEM) partners - has been selected as the Best of Innovations Award winner in the category of Integrated Home Systems at CES 2007.

The ControlPoint 1000 is a dedicated network appliance to be offered to service providers, retailers and hardware OEMs on a royalty-free basis in order to allow such partners to rapidly develop compelling solutions for entertainment and home control, and to accelerate their time to market.

The reference design includes Echelon’s power line signalling technology to communicate with other automation devices over a home’s existing electrical wires - eliminating the need for new or retrofit wiring; Echelon’s interoperable self-installation (ISI) technology, which enables products to install themselves automatically without using any installation tools; and 4HomeMedia’s ControlPoint software for delivering next generation broadband services, which includes an intuitive, cross-platform, and contextual graphical user-interface.

This combination of an intuitive user interface, a fully featured platform for delivering a wide range of broadband services, affordable and highly reliable power line communications, and self-installation technology eliminates the major causes of homeowner headaches that have hampered previous efforts at creating a mass market for home control and will make makes installing, personalising, and operating home automation and entertainment devices a viable proposition for any member of a household.

‘We selected Echelon’s ISI technology for our home control initiatives based on factors such as reliability, ease of use, and expandability’, said Brad Kayton, Vice President of Marketing at 4HomeMedia.

‘High reliability, which ensures low product returns, reduced technical support costs, and higher customer satisfaction, is something that has been missing in the past in home automation and control’.
Further reading

Transceivers and FPGAs unite for networking
Off-the-shelf solution combines Altera’s 32bit Nios II family of embedded processors for FPGAs with a specially programmed Echelon powerline smart transceiver

Association shares chipmaking expertise
SiConnect is the first powerline communications chipmaker to join the UK National Microelectronics Institute

STM supplies to Chinese car builders
A European semiconductor company has been recognised as China’s number one automotive semiconductor supplier for 2006 by the independent industry analyst iSuppli Corporation

Senior management appointments at chip firm
A leading specilast in system interconnect ICs has appointed a new Chief Technology Officer and Vice President of Operations

‘And by using this ANSI/CEA 709.1 protocol, and bridging to TCP-IP via our ControlPoint software, the home power line can be used as a back-bone network able to link together dozens of different types of devices from thousands of vendors globally all in a single, unified interface’.

ANSI/CEA 709.1 is the North American home control communications standard and is a leading control standard worldwide in related industries such as intelligent communities, residential electricity metering, and commercial buildings including apartments and condominiums.

The ControlPoint 1000 is designed to be the centre of a home control network.

Unlike previous hardware designs, the ControlPoint is designed to support the new generation of plug and play standards, and to enable partners to create home control solutions by choosing products to match the end application, regardless of manufacturer.

The user interface (UI) provided by 4HomeMedia’s ControlPoint platform supports any browser-based display device, including network-enabled televisions, personal computers, dedicated display panels, cellphones, and video gaming systems.

‘Echelon and 4HomeMedia have collaborated to make home control simple, extensible and affordable’, said Anders Axelsson, Echelon’s Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing.

‘As the first member of the Digital Home Alliance, 4HomeMedia has taken a leadership position in delivering value to consumers overlooked by other industry players’.

‘The combined solution delivers simple self-installation, highly reliable communications, and a powerful user-interface - the three essential ingredients to making a mass market for home control a reality’.

‘We have felt for some time now that the market for home controls will accelerate once ecosystems of highly reliable, inter-operable products combine with compelling end-user applications that are easy to install and use’, said Bill Ablondi, Director of Home Systems research at Parks Associates.

A FireWire audio controller from Oxford Semiconductor is the enabling technology behind the first ever bus-powered speakers from LaCie
Related stories

Controller adds next-generation audio
The latest version of Oxford Semiconductor’s OXFW970 FireWire audio controller IC allows next generation audio systems to be easily added to desktop and notebook systems

FireWire audio chip for high-quality sound systems
The OXFW970 is a dedicated FireWire audio controller IC that provides eight digital audio output channels

Announced today, LaCie’s new FireWire Speakers boast a unique exterior design by Neil Poulton, while using the OXFW970 chip to bring high quality sound to desktops and notebooks via a single FireWire connection. The speakers also feature an audio line input for direct connection of MP3 players.

‘With FireWire ports in all MACs and gaining acceptance in more than 50% of Windows laptops, consumer applications that utilise the power of FireWire for audio and video applications are on the rise’, said Sundar Vanchinathan, Oxford Semiconductor VP of Business Development.

By harnessing FireWire’s characteristically high line power capacity, the LaCie FireWire Speakers produce a minimum 8W output and as a consequence, achieve a deeper, richer sound than possible from limited 2W USB speakers.

Being bus powered, the speakers remove the need for separate batteries or AC power adapters.
Further reading

NAS controllers are easy to interface
Network-attached storage controllers integrate Gigabit Ethernet MAC and PCI ports, making them accessible to client devices connected via Ethernet or 802.11 Wi-Fi networks

Kit accelerates Linux-based network design
Software development kit for the OXETHU954 network connectivity controller chip aims to dramatically simplify the design of Linux based device networking products

Compatible with FireWire, the OXFW970 takes in 24bit serial audio data, samples it at 96kHz, and produces digital sound from four I2S outputs.

It also provides two audio inputs for instrument and microphone line inputs.

In a 100-pin TQFP package, the chip integrates an ARM7 processor, high-speed buffer manager, RAM and Flash memory.

By enabling digitised sound to be carried from the PC for distribution to a satellite speaker configuration with a built-in high precision audio DAC, the FireWire audio controller offers immunity from conducted noise, hum and crackle which can be a feature of the analogue audio output of some PCs.

Through its FireWire audio controllers, Oxford Semiconductor has led the development of breakout boxes, external sound cards and multichannel speaker systems, providing laptop users with quality sound for the very first time.

Oxford’s third-generation audio controller, the OXFW971, with the capability to support 16 inputs and 16 outputs along with SPDIF and MIDI, has been designed into leading suppliers to the music industry and is in production now.

Mitel Semiconductor has introduced the world’s highest density AAL2 segmentation and re-assembly (SAR) device which simultaneously processes 1023 CIDs and 1023 VC connections - more than any device available on the market. Called the MT90502, it offers manufacturers a high-bandwidth solution for combined voice and data services in multiservice switching platforms, 3G mobile system equipment, carrier-class gateways, Next Generation Digital Loop Carriers (NGDLC), and ATM edge switches. The MT90502 AAL2 SAR receives constant bit rate (CBR) and variable bit rate (VBR) traffic from a TDM stream, and maps it to cells for transmission over ATM networks.

For Voice over Digital Subscriber Line (VoDSL) applications, the MT90502 directly accepts Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) and Adaptive Differential Pulse Code Modulation (ADPCM) traffic for packetisation.

The device also implements silence suppression and comfort noise generation for G.711 and G.726 data formats.

Supporting 1023 active CIDs and 1023 active VC connections, the device easily accommodates scalability and bandwidth requirements.

When two MT90502 devices are cascaded, over 2000 phone call terminations can be processed.

This is equivalent to three T3 links, or a full Sonet link at 155Mbit/s.

The ability to achieve SONET density with only two SAR devices yields a substantial reduction in cost, power consumption and board space compared to other currently available solutions.

The MT90502 AAL2 SAR supports both compressed and uncompressed voice.

The device connects to commercially available DSPs through synchronous ports.

Most other solutions consist of interfacing a SAR to a DSP through an asynchronous port.

This requires interrupt service routines or polling mechanisms to establish transfers of information from the DSP to the AAL2 SAR, which loads the CPU.

The MT90502 eliminates the load on the CPU by using a serial interface to the DSP that supports CBR and VBR traffic using HDLC encapsulation.

The device can route ATM cells to any one of the three Utopia interfaces, the microprocessor or the SAR engine.

The ability to route traffic is optimal for SONET equipment, since it allows instantaneous redundancy support.

The multiple UTOPIA interfaces also allow for cascading of multiple SAR devices, to increase AAL2 density, or to support AAL1 and AAL5 traffic.

The MT90502 is currently sampling, supplied in a 456-pin BGA package.

Next Page »