February 2008
Device Software Optimization Monthly
News

Wind River and Carrier Grade Linux 4.0


Wind River Delivers on Carrier Grade Linux Specification for Networking Industry

Wind River has become the first commercial vendor to meet the Carrier Grade Linux (CGL) 4.0 requirements specified by the Linux Foundation. Wind River Platform for Network Equipment, Linux Edition 2.0 is the first Linux distribution for the network and telecommunication industries that adheres to the most recent CGL specification and is available immediately to Wind River customers for project development. Learn more about CGL and Wind River solutions. Learn More »

Wind River Platform for Network Equipment, Linux Edition Product Overview

Wind River Platform for Network Equipment, Linux Edition Product Note


View AllEvents

Mobile World Congress
February 11–13, 2008
Barcelona, Spain

Embedded World 2008
February 26–28, 2008
Nuremberg, Germany

Real-Time & Embedded Computing Conference
February 19, 2008
Huntsville, AL

February 21, 2008
Melbourne, FL

Avionics08
March 5–6, 2008
Amsterdam, the Netherlands

OSiM USA
March 11–12, 2008
San Francisco, CA

Military & Aerospace Electronics Forum 2008
March 11-12, 2008
San Diego, CA

Aerospace & Defense Seminar Series
March 12, 2008
Santa Clara, CA

March 27, 2008
Ellicott City, MD

April 2, 2008
Irving, TX

View AllWind River Courses

General Purpose Platform, Linux Edition (Workbench/Linux)
February 20–21, 2008: Sunnyvale, CA

Workbench, On–Chip Debugging Edition
February 20–21, 2008: Boston, MA

Linux Device Drivers Development
February 26–29, 2008: Sunnyvale, CA
March 18–21, 2008: Westford, MA

Workbench 2.6 for VxWorks
February 28–29, 2008: Los Angeles, CA

General Purpose Platform, VxWorks Edition for New Users
February 26–29, 2008: Kista, Sweden
March 4–7, 2008: Sunnyvale, CA
March 4–7, 2008: Maidenhead, UK

Introduction to Linux
March 11–14, 2008: Chicago, IL


See More Courses »

Jason Whitmire, General Manager, Mobile Solutions


An Industry and Technology Revolution Is on the Horizon
LiMo, and in a slightly different way Android, has killed the standards-based approach to open source development in mobile. In the Linux world, creating an esoteric, theoretical application standard not based on market-driven code requires too much speculative investment without any clear mitigation of ROI risk for anyone to take up anymore. Read More »