Product Brief
SoC puts WiFi into battery-powered devices
Rich Nass7/14/2009 8:07 AM EDT
The G2C543 SoC includes a 32-bit CPU, an operating system, a network stack, crypto accelerators, a power-management subsystem, a real-time clock, and a versatile sensor interface, which allows it to serve as a networking slave or a standalone host subsystem. It draws just 4 μA in standby mode and can wake up and transmit a packet in less than 11 ms. It's housed in a 72-pin QFN package and is priced at $4.80 in volumes of one million units.
The G2M5437 module comes with a power amplifier and antenna, the G2C543 SoC, and 4 Mbits of flash memory. It comes pre-certified for FCC and CE regulations and is tested for WiFi Alliance WMM and WMM power-save modes. The module is sampling now, and is priced at $13 in 10,000-unit volumes.
The Icon development kit lets developers easily add WiFi to an applications processor-based design. The kit, dubbed the G2-IDK, includes a small board with standard interfaces (UART, SPI, SDIO) and an Epsilon module pre-loaded with the Icon application. Hence, a G2 module can become a WiFi networking interface for mains- and battery-powered devices. The platform is suited for use with 8- or 16-bit host applications processors that can't connect to other WiFi ICs, or for use with 32-bit host processors that don't have the bandwidth needed to run a network stack. The kit sells for $129.
More information is available at www.g2microsystems.com.



