Redpine Signals

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Redpine Signals
Company typePrivate
IndustrySemiconductor, wireless, chipset
Founded2001; 23 years ago (2001)
Headquarters,
Key people
Venkat Mattela, CEO
Number of employees
250 (04 June, 2018)
Websitewww.redpinesignals.com

Redpine Signals is a fabless semiconductor company that started its operation in 2001.[1] The company makes chipsets and system-level products for wireless networks.[2] It serves the Internet of Things and wireless embedded systems market, enabling all volume levels of chipsets and modules.[citation needed]

In 2005, Redpine Signals developed a low power 802.11 b/g chipset, which it licensed to a semiconductor company for use in its product or SoC as a wireless interface.[citation needed] The company established a single stream 802.11n Wi-Fi product in 2007 for handheld devices.[citation needed] In 2012, Redpine Signals developed a simultaneous dual-band Wi-Fi 11n/BT 4.0 + 5 GHz MIMO 11ac convergence SoC for smartphones and tablets.[3] The company also introduced a simultaneous dual-band 450 Mbit/s 3x3 802.11n chipset for digital home and enterprise applications.[citation needed]

In 2020, its connectivity business, including Wi-Fi and Bluetooth products, its development center in Hyderabad, and patent portfolio, was acquired by Silicon Labs.[4]

Products and services[edit]

Redpine Signals' products include single stream 802.11abgn chipsets and modules, and system products for Wi-Fi based Real-Time Locating Systems (RTLS).[5][6] The company also offers 'Wi-Fi Starter Kits' that include Redpine Wi-Fi Interface cards integrated with microcontroller development kits from partnership companies.[7]

[8]

There is an open-source device driver mainlined in the Linux kernel for some rsi91x hardware that uses the mac80211 framework.[9] Other drivers are documented in Comparison of open-source wireless drivers.

The company offers a comprehensive Internet of Things IoT platform that includes hardware boards, application development environment, cloud software and services framework as well as a product synthesis solution for synthesizing the final product. The platform significantly reduces the time it takes to develop and bring to market new IoT devices by providing integrated sensing, computing, communication, power management, cloud and application support.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Paultre, Alix. "The Tinker's Toolbox - Venkat Mattela of Redpine and Øyvind Strøm of Atmel on Wireless Embedded Systems", ECN Magazine, 26, October 2011.
  2. ^ "Redpine Signals Selected as a 2012 Red Herring Top 100 Americas Tech Startup Winner ", PR Newswire, 30, May 2012.
  3. ^ "Dual-Band Wireless SoC from Redpine Signals", Sensors Magazine, 20, May 2012.
  4. ^ "Evertiq - Silicon Labs completes acquisition of Redpine Signals' co..." evertiq.com. Retrieved 2020-06-01.
  5. ^ Love, Janine. "WiseMote RTLS tags serve Wi-Fi apps", EE Times, 9, April 2012.
  6. ^ "WiseMote RTLS tags serve Wi-Fi apps", PR Newswire, 3, April 2012.
  7. ^ McConnel, Toni. "Atmel and Redpine Signals enable ultra-low power 802.11n Wi-Fi for AVR and ARM-based MCUs", EE Times, 28, September 2011.
  8. ^ Michelle Sieling *In 2013, Redpine Signals launched a multiprotocol Wi-Fi, dual mode BT 4.0, and Zigbee chipset and modules for the IoT and handheld devices market.
  9. ^ "Linux kernel: /drivers/net/wireless/rsi".

External links[edit]