Tuesday, September 7, 2010

IDT to exhibit industry-leading products at IDF 2010

Intel Developer Forum San Francisco 2010, SAN JOSE, USA: Integrated Device Technology Inc. (IDT) will be exhibiting its industry-leading products at the 2010 Intel Developer Forum, which will be held at the Moscone West Center in San Francisco, CA from September 13-15.

IDT will be displaying select products that are synergistic with Intel-based products and systems, including DisplayPort, Signal Integrity and PCI Express (PCIe) solutions.

Among the solutions on display, IDT will be demonstrating the industry’s first Enterprise Non-Volatile Memory Host Controller Interface (NVMHCI) Flash Controller. Enterprise NVMHCI defines a standard programming interface for high-performance non-volatile memory subsystems with a goal of driving the adoption of PCIe-based Solid State Drives (SSDs).

PCIe SSD advantages include higher throughput, lower latency, reduced power consumption, and a dramatic improvement in storage performance. This standard is being defined by the NVMHCI Workgroup, founded by Intel, Microsoft and Dell, and is targeted to be completed in Q4 2010.

IDT will also be demonstrating high-performance signal conditioning repeaters for multi-gigabit, serial-differential protocols, including DisplayPort, PCI Express 2.1, USB3, and 6Gbps SATA. The IDT repeater demo will feature reference boards for a subset of the protocols listed above operating in system.

In addition, the IDT ViewXpand, the industry’s first DisplayPort-based multi-monitor solution, will be on display.

“IDF is an ideal setting for IDT to display our unique, innovative products as well as to educate customers and industry leaders about the ongoing transformation of IDT,” said Ted Tewksbury, president and CEO at IDT.

“Building on IDT’s strong digital heritage, we have added high-performance analog and system expertise. This enables IDT to add greater value to our customers’ applications by delivering system-optimized solutions that maximize overall performance, minimize bill of materials, and accelerate time to market.”

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