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New 'C2000 DSPs provide best price/performance ratio in industry Revolutionary 'C27x architecture combines the best of DSP and MCU technologies Celebrating 10 years of floating-point DSP excellence (1988-1998) New TMS320 applications make DSP development easier TI's C54x family extends reach from low cost to high performance Experience power-efficient performance with 100-MIPS 'C549 ICASSP show salutes 50th anniversary of IEEE Registration opes for DSPS Fest '98 Quad codec-filter combo brings multi-channel capabilities to CO line cards New Third-Party Hardware & Software TI leads the digital age of electronics with strategic acquisitions and alliances |
ICASSP show salutes 50th anniversary of IEEETI DSP Challenge winners showcased
The International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing will honor and celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE). The conference, targeting engineers, scientists, professors, and DSP industry representatives, will be held May 12–15 at the Convention Center in Seattle, Washington. TI will be sponsoring a reception honoring IEEE’s 50th anniversary. In addition, TI’s CEO, Tom Engibous, will serve as keynote speaker.
The winners of the TI DSP Solutions Challenge, a world-wide competition showcasing over 270 entries from academic teams striving for $100,000 grand prize, will be announced at the conference. University students, along with an advising professor, create and submit an original design using a TI DSP and an original software program. The professor representing the worldwide grand prize team will receive a cash prize of $15,000 and an offer to work at TI for a six-month sabbatical program. At the conference, judges will evaluate the designs of the top three finalists representing the three geographic regions: the Americas, Europe, and Asia. Projects are judged on their merit, creative use of DSP, education level of the team’s members, and how the application can be utilized in today’s market-place. The previous winner developed a DSP-based system that restores old motion pictures at a rate 10 times faster than previous methods. Drop by the winner’s presentation arena to see what tomorrow’s DSP innovators have created. |




