Landmark
Bluetooth product for fixed-mobile
convergence developed in three months
using innovative tool
A
wireless telephony access point for
home use - a product that is one of
the most sophisticated deeply-embedded
Bluetooth systems ever developed -
has been created in record time with
the aid of a new development tool
from Cambridge Consultants.
Designed in
just three months by Clipcomm, for
Korea Telecom's 'OnePhone' fixed-mobile-convergence
(FMC) service, the new BlueStation
series uses Bluetooth to allow mobile
phone users to make or receive calls
over the fixed wireline phone network
when at home. This facility allows
mobile phone users to use the same
phone and number wherever they are,
and reduce call charges. With Bluetooth
becoming commonplace on mobile phones,
this telephony concept is attracting
worldwide attention, and a similar
scheme called BT Fusion is currently
being launched in the UK by BT.
Conventionally,
sophisticated Bluetooth products employ
a Bluetooth chip operating under the
control of another processor, which
manages the overall system and the
user interface. However, the recent
introduction of Cambridge Consultants'
xIDE for Interface Express tools gives
users unrestricted access to the full
native power of the XAP processor
core inside CSR's market-leading Bluetooth
device, BlueCore. This allowed Clipcomm
to develop a single chip solution
that performs both Bluetooth and system
control functions, saving the cost
and real estate required for a separate
processor and memory - an important
consideration for a cost-sensitive
consumer product like this.
Up to now,
'hostless' Bluetooth systems, employing
the XAP processor inside BlueCore,
have typically been used for relatively
simple applications such as headsets,
which need only a small amount of
Bluetooth application software (Profiles),
and some simple user controls such
as an LED and push-buttons.
However, Clipcomm's
new access point product is much more
sophisticated. The embedded system
handles up to four handsets and two
public network lines, and has to support
multiple instances of CTP, HSP, GAP
and SDP Bluetooth Profiles (cordless
telephony, headset, generic access
and service discovery respectively).
In addition, BlueCore manages the
rest of the embedded system and its
user interface. This includes a peripheral
that performs the required public
network functions such as dial tone
generation, tone detection and caller
ID detection. Conventionally, these
functions can be performed by a low-cost
application-specific IC, but Clipcomm
has chosen to implement them using
a DSP - which allows it to perform
line echo cancellation as well - providing
a very high performance solution.
With the aid
of xIDE for Interface Express, the
complete embedded system was developed
in just three months. Clipcomm purchased
three licenses for the software development
kit (SDK) which provides a complete
compile/make/debug toolchain for the
XAP processor, plus a library of qualified
Bluetooth Profiles. Another major
aspect of the toolsuite is its integrated
development environment (IDE), which
simplifies software projects through
a highly-graphical software project
management environment and user interface.
Speed of development
was aided by the IDE and the Profiles
in the SDK - which feature very high-level
APIs. The APIs minimise the application
software required to call and run
Profiles - supporting both the speed
of development and the efficiency
of the resulting code.
"Without
this SDK, it's unlikely we could have
implemented this embedded system in
such an economic way," says Jaewoo
Ahn, CTO at Clipcomm. "The high-level
application level interface of the
SDK also reduced the development time
required for this product. It's helped
us to create a very powerful and economic
access point solution, very early
in the lifecycle of this important
emerging telephony market".
"Bluetooth
is now finding its way into many more
complex applications", adds Cambridge
Consultants' Tim Fowler. "This
new toolsuite - with its integrated
development environment - provides
Bluetooth developers with the high-level
development support they need to address
these opportunities. Engineers can
really exploit its facilities to rapidly
create powerful Bluetooth products,
as Clipcomm's engineers have demonstrated
on this remarkable development project".
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Notes for editors:
Fixed-mobile-convergence
or FMC, looks set to catalyse
a fundamental shift in the telecommunications
business. With approaching 50% of
cellular minutes now taking place
indoors, all major telecom operators
are looking at the technology, and
the UMA Consortium and FMC Association
are working on standards and protocols
that will allow FMC systems to offer
far-reaching benefits for both users
and operators. Bluetooth technology
is being used in both Korea Telecom's
and BT's pioneering systems, but in
the longer term, Wi-Fi is expected
to take over.
BlueStation:
BlueStation is a series of Bluetooth
access points (BS-P100, BS-P200) developed
by Clipcomm. Its unique features of
combining voice and data are best
suitable for FMC services such as
KT’s OnePhone service. In Q3
2005, a VoIP (SIP) enabled BlueStation
will be released, with which existing
OnePhone users can wirelessly make
or receive VoIP phone calls without
changing their cellular phones. http://www.clipcomm.co.kr
xIDE
for Interface Express provides
a complete software development kit
(SDK) for developing standalone applications
on CSR's BlueCore™ device (with
BlueCore running both a full Bluetooth
protocol stack and application software
- rather than being controlled by
a host processor). It offers a powerful
integrated development environment
that allows editing, compilation,
build and debug from within a single
tool, making development more productive.
Source code and build files are managed
using a project filing system that
will be familiar to users of similar
integrated development environments,
helping developers to get up to speed
quickly. Developed software runs natively
on the XAP microprocessor (which was
developed by Cambridge Consultants)
integrated within BlueCore, making
more computational power available.
xIDE for Interface Express includes
a large library of qualified Bluetooth
Profiles - the software that defines
how Bluetooth works in specific applications.
BlueCore
ICs for Bluetooth applications:
http://www.csr.com/products/bcrange.htm
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