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Parthus drives mobile Internet on a chip

The Irish company teams with Psion to develop its 'breakthrough' chip, which combines PC, mobile phone, and GPS functions.
Written by ZDNET Editors, Contributor
Ireland's Parthus Technologies Wednesday announced a breakthrough in chip design it hopes could thrust it to the forefront of the mobile communications revolution.

Parthus unveiled a single-chip computer design called InfoStream, which could drive a broad range of next-generation mobile devices such as phones and Internet appliances. The chip design was developed with UK handheld computer manufacturer Psion, which has agreed to license it for a new range of products. It will also be used by U.S. mobile phone manufacturer Motorola Inc. (mot) in its new-generation "smartphones," Parthus said.

The new design combines the capabilities of a personal computer, a third-generation mobile phone, and a Global Positioning System, and has substantial cost, power, and ease-of-use benefits.

Parthus said the design, which would cost just a few dollars per chip in quantity, would "drastically" reduce the time it took to get future mobile Internet devices to market. The company floated on the London Stock Exchange and on Nasdaq in May.

Parthus made it clear that despite a rocky start for "converged" mobile devices, such as the unpopular WAP (Wireless Application Protocol), the company is focused on a future of mobile computing. "We are entering the era of mobile, connected computing and communication," said Brian Long, chief executive officer of Parthus, in a statement.

"By delivering the mobile Internet on a chip, InfoStream helps bring us closer to the true pervasiveness of next-generation smart phones that will harness the power of the Internet, the PC, and the mobile phone through one handheld device."

An industry observer said InfoStream is well-suited to such next-generation gadgets. "With the growth of mobile data services expected to skyrocket within the next few years, the Parthus InfoStream platform ... is well-positioned to be a major market player in the next generation of Internet-enabled mobile devices," said Allen Nogee, senior analyst at Cahners In-Stat Group, in a prepared statement.

Psion is the principal mover in the Symbian alliance, which aims to build smart phones based on Psion's EPOC operating system and which released its first product last month in the form of an Ericsson PDA/mobile phone.

Other players in the smart phone space include Microsoft Corp. (msft), Intel Corp. (intc), Motorola, Palm Inc. (palm), and others.

The company's shares jumped on the London exchange following the news, gaining 18.5p, or 6.88 percent, to 257p by 10 a.m. GMT. Psion shares were up 16p, or nearly 3 percent, to 560p.

Reuters contributed to this report.

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