2007 BMW X5 intros high-speed communication chip based on Flexray tech
Munich (Germany) - BMW today announced a new version of its X5 flagship SUV. It’s larger, stronger and faster and probably better and more expensive than its predecessor, but what makes this new model especially interesting form a technological view is the presence of a Flexray chip.
Developed in a consortium that includes BMW, Bosch, DaimlerChrysler, Freescale, General Motors, Philips and Volkswagen, Flexray is a protocol that delivers about 10 Mbit/s bandwidth for communication between active and passive safety systems, collision avoidance systems, powertrain management systems and driver assistance systems. Flexray is about 20 times faster than comparable and current in-car communication systems, according to Freescale.
According to the Flexray consortium, the technology is expected to be used in time- and event-triggered communication schemes, support of fault-tolerant systems and offer a high error detection and error diagnosis capability, a dedicated automotive electrical physical layer with sophisticated powerdown and wake up mechanisms, extendability and scalability for upgrades and support for different network topologies.
Freescale is currently the only manufacturer that has announced Flexray processors.

BMW did not say when the new X5 will be available and how much it will cost. But expect to pay substantially more than for today’s model, which has an entry fee of at least $42,500.
- Intel sells media and signaling business to Eicon
- Rocky start for Qimonda IPO on New York exchange
- First look inside NASCAR's state-of-the-art timing and scoring vehicle
- How ATI fits into AMD's Intel beating strategy - analyst opinion
- Clone notebook share worldwide declines to 14.5% in Q2
- AOL draws fire after accidentally releasing data on keyword searches
- Lack of licensing revenue puts Transmeta back in the red
- Seagate ships 119 million hard drives in fiscal 2006
- Defcon 2006: Casinos could be losing millions to slot machine hackers
- Vista beta tester posts video of speech recognition
- MS: Xbox 360 HD DVD player to be cheapest on market
- University of Calif. joins Google book scan push
- Fuji's new digital SLR camera helps fight crime
- Viacom's MTV Networks acquires net content producer Atom Entertainment
- Samsung develops first 3" VGA screen for digital cameras
- Samsung converts 12" capacity to NAND flash to meet demand from Apple, say sources
- DRAM contract prices continue to go up in August
- AUO betting on 40-, 42" LCD-TV panel market




