Skill Development
Sanity, Strategy, Sustainability: The New World of Verification Platforms
Verification-as-services
Jun. 18, 2008 12:00 PM
The lines between embedded and enterprise computing are blurring.
As embedded devices become more and more networked, they form a
perimeter at the edge of our enterprise data centers and a rich source
of real-time, real-world information.
These newcomers to the enterprise are coming of age. Embedded computing
is moving beyond the world of hidden computing and a behind-the-scenes
role in military and industrial applications. Embedded applications are
no longer bench projects
hacked together by a few elite engineers.
Embedded computing now comprises mainstream applications that are a
part of our daily lives and it is big business.
As the embedded computing industry evolves to support an
ever-growing range of capabilities and features, embedded applications
are becoming increasingly complex. Take, for example, our cell phones.
They not only make calls, but send and receive text messages, surf the
Internet, take photographs, and play music. While these devices pack
more hardware into a given space to enable these features, they are
fundamentally driven and operated by software. We've gone from a few
thousand lines of code in mobile phones 10 years ago to millions of
lines of code today, running on full-fledged, 32-bit, multitasking
embedded operating systems.
With the software content in electronic products doubling every two
years, manufacturers are finding they can no longer do everything
themselves. To keep up, companies employ more engineering resources
across the globe. Today, embedded-software development involves a
global supply chain of engineers, offshore outsourcers, open source and
third-party software vendors. All of them are delivering hundreds of
software components (see Figure 1).
About Mark UndersethMark Underseth founded S2 Technologies in 2000, bringing over 20 years of experience in the design of embedded communication devices. Prior to founding S2 Technologies, he was the VP of engineering and responsible for all software development at Mitsubishi's Mobile Communications Technology Center in San Diego. His primary focus was on the development of the world's first single chip dual-mode IS-136 handset. Mark received a BA in computer science with an emphasis in mathematics from Point Loma College, and an MS in computer science from San Diego State University. He has been awarded four patents and has three patents pending in the area of embedded systems.