|
Home
Research area
Partners
People
Publications
Symposia
|
Trader
Modern technical systems such as household goods, DVD players, PCs,
medical X-ray imaging, printers, advanced car vehicles, and
airplanes rely increasingly on software. Complex systems cannot be
built without software accomplishing their integration. Embedded
computer programs monitor the whole system and take care that the
system accomplishes more than its parts would. In such
software-intensive systems reliability is of prime importance.
A number of technical trends in embedded systems press a need for
better development methods resulting in reliable products.
- Complexity increase: the extent and complexity of embedded
systems and software has been exponentially increasing in recent
years and there seems no end in sight for this trend.
- Product life cycle decrease: the innovation cycle for these
products is decreasing continuously and has in many sectors now
come down to a few months.
- Open Systems: embedded systems are opened to the outside
world as a result of which security, reliability, and
availability are emerging problems. They become more open in two
ways:
- They will not be solely developed by just one
manufacturer. Increasingly, the provider of the basic
functionality will be host to third parties who will add
their own functionality.
- They will, during their lifetimes, become involved in
networked environments that affect these systems in ways
that are not foreseen during their creation.
Trader objectives
It is the objective of the Trader product to develop methods and
tools for ensuring reliability of consumer electronic products. This
should result in minimizing product failures that are exposed to the
user.
We use cases from Philips Semiconductors’ Innovation Center
Eindhoven in the area of digital television. The Trader project has
the following objectives in mind:
- Ensure reliability by studying and show proof of concept of
methods to be applied at design time, test time, and product
run-time.
- Avoid user frustration by applying user-centric approaches.
Ensure reliability not only in a single product, but also in a
complete product line.
Consumer electronics – digital television - as industrial
project case
Achieving the Trader goals requires focus. In the Trader
project, we focus on the industrial sector of consumer electronic
products, in particular on digital television. Consumer products
present the most stringent conditions due to the high emphasis on
both cost-effectiveness and ease of use.
Trader organization
A range of partners carries out the research project. These
partners are chosen in such a way that the requisite fields of
expertise (e.g. system architecture, software and hardware
mechanisms, development processes, and development tooling), are
present. The project is carried out under the project management
responsibility of the Embedded Systems Institute. For a considerable
amount of time, the project participants are located at the Embedded
Systems Institute.
Trader is a collaboration of the industrial and academic
partners: NXP (previously Philips Semiconductors), Philips Consumer Electronics,
NXP Research (previously Philips Research Laboratories), TASS, Design Technology
Institute (a joint research institute of the Eindhoven University of
Technology and the National University of Singapore), Delft
University of Technology, University of Twente, University of Leiden,
IMEC, and the Embedded Systems Institute. The project is partly
funded by the Dutch Government.
|