Wind River Becomes a Strategic Developer
Member of Eclipse; Proposes the Foundation's First
Device Software Development Project
- Joins broad ecosystem of premier industry players including IBM, Intel,
MontaVista and QNX for the device space
- Drives next level of industry standardization; helps companies further
industry standardization
ALAMEDA, Calif. - March 8, 2005 - Wind River Systems, Inc. (NASDAQ: WIND), the global
leader in Device Software Optimization (DSO) and the Eclipse Foundation today announced that Wind River will propose
and lead an Eclipse Device Software Development Platform project, the first project specifically for device software
development. Wind River elevated its membership status with the Eclipse Foundation from being an add-in provider to
Strategic Developer and will further incorporate Eclipse-based technology into Wind River products. With the Device
Software Development Project, Wind River is bringing its expertise in device software development and run-time
solutions to the Eclipse community to foster industry standardization and innovation to help companies develop and
run device software better, faster, more reliably and at a lower cost.
"The goal of Eclipse is to create a universal development platform to enable global enterprises to develop software
more efficiently," said Mike Milinkovich, executive director, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. "Wind River has deep experience
in device software and will provide the vision, technology and resources to enhance the Eclipse platform specifically
for embedded software development. The addition of the Device Software Development Platform project will help expand
Eclipse's presence in embedded computing, a key focus area for the foundation as outlined in the recently unveiled
Eclipse Roadmap."
Eclipse has gained tremendous traction in the enterprise market and is focused on replicating this success into
several key areas, including embedded systems where vendors have started to adopt Eclipse technology for development
tools in the device space. The Device Software Development Platform project will build on this success by creating
an open source tools infrastructure that is supported by multiple vendors. In the future, developers will find that
the Device Software Development Platform enables them to easily create software that operates across a wide range of
operating systems, connection mechanisms and target architectures. The Device Software Development Platform will
initially focus on a framework and exemplary tools for target management that will enable developers to deploy,
debug, and analyze applications on a device as well as the configuration of operating system and middleware components.
"By bringing the Device Software Development Project to the market, Wind River will help change the way device software
development is done," said John Bruggeman, chief marketing officer for Wind River. "Manufacturers will now be able to
standardize on choice � using a widely accepted, fully integrated development platform that supports all Eclipse
technologies and is backed by an unprecedented ecosystem of industry-leading companies."
Eclipse Strategic Developers have pledged support for the Device Software Development Platform:
"Intel welcomes Wind River's participation in Eclipse and looks forward to their initiation of the new Device
Software Development Platform project," said Jon Khazam, vice president and general manager of Intel's Software
Products Division and Eclipse Foundation board member. "There is a strong interest in Eclipse-based development tools
for device-level software. Wind River's efforts will help accelerate the move to a common shared infrastructure
among tools vendors, reducing time to market and providing greater consistency and interoperability to developers."
"As a founding member of Eclipse, IBM welcomes Wind River's proposal to
help standardize device development via the Device Software Development
Platform project, bringing the benefits of Wind River's experience and
Eclipse's open environment to the device development community," said
Stephen Saunders, development director, IBM Rational. "Providing a standard
way to build embedded applications will help accelerate software development
and innovation in the rapidly-growing device space."
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