Boston, MA 10/09/2014 (wallstreetpr) – According to reports, Freescale Semiconductor Ltd (NYSE:FSL) has come up with next generation communication processors, which are claimed to be the best in class offering by the company. FSL has announced that 28-nm QorIQ T1 family multi-core communications processors are the first SOCS (System on Chip) that can demonstrate interoperability with the Ethernet PHY products. With this offering, FSL has become the first company to demonstrate 5G and 2.5 GBPS Ethernet PHY products interoperability between Aquantia AQrate Copper PHY technology and SOC.
Insights of the matter:
The new upgrades in Ethernet make it a lot advanced and high-quality than the existing Category 5e. Because of this upgrade, all the copper cabling means customers are turning towards the newly launched products and technology. Major turnaround has been seen in the areas like WLAN access points, Ethernet switches and appliances, small cells, wireless LAN controllers and other applications. Management of the company understands the changing phenomena of the market, which shows that future will belong to next generation Ethernet products. On the basis of the current trend in the market, one can easily say that demand of these next gen products is likely to boom in the near future.
According to Matthias Machowinski, Directing Analyst for Enterprise Networks at Infonetics Research, demand of these latest products will shoot up in the near future. For example, 2015 will belong to new 802.11ac enabled access points, which will take off in this year and continue to grow further. By 2018, number of 802.11ac enabled access point is expected to cross 20 million mark easily. High end next generation technologies like 2.5 and 5 GBPS Ethernet of Freescale Semiconductor Ltd (NYSE:FSL) and other companies will help network managers big time in bridging gap between wireless and wired network performance. Newly launched QorIQ T1 family of FSL is capable of delivering two to four times of performance as compared to the technologies that are in use at present.