|
Datalight is a privately held software company specializing in power failsafe and high performance software for preserving data integrity in embedded systems. The company was founded in 1983 by Roy Sherrill, and is headquartered in Bothell, Washington. ==Overview and history== Datalight was founded in 1983 by Roy Sherrill, a former Boeing engineer.〔"(Ensuring that devices don't lose data )." Tricia Duryee. ''The Seattle Times''; July 16, 2007.〕〔"(Leadership Team )." Datalight. Retrieved 2010-08-23.〕 Datalight's initial products were two DOS applications: the Datalight Small-C compiler and the Datalight C-Bug debugger. A full C compiler named Datalight C was available from Datalight between 1987 and 1993; Datalight C, developed by Walter Bright, evolved into Zortech C and is now Digital Mars C.〔Eckel, Bruce. ''Using C++'', Osborne McGraw-Hill, 1989, p. 34.〕〔''PC Magazine'', (Volume 7, Issues 18–19 ), p. 38.〕〔(Walter Bright home page ). Retrieved 2010-08-04.〕 Datalight C was also developed into an optimizing compiler called Datalight Optimum-C, which later became Zortech C++, the first native C++ compiler.〔"(History of PC based C-compilers )." Bob Stout. 1998.〕〔(Walter Bright interview ). ''Bitwise Magazine''; May 2006.〕 In 1988, Datalight released C_thru_ROM, which provided embeddedable C functions and C start-up code, allowing programs developed on DOS to run as standalone applications without DOS dependence.〔"(Desktop DOS goes undercover to run embedded systems )." David Shear. ''EDN''; August 4, 1994.〕 In 1989, ROM-DOS 1.0 was released. CardTrick was announced in 1993 to support the flash memory being built into PCMCIA cards. CardTrick later evolved into the embedded flash memory manager FlashFX in 1995, moving Datalight into the raw flash memory market. The company grew rapidly in the late 1990s, receiving the WA Fast 50 award for the fastest growing companies in Washington state in 1997 and 1998. The first of four patents to eventually be assigned to Datalight, "Method and apparatus for allocating storage in a flash memory",〔United States Patent 5860082: "(Method and apparatus for allocating storage in a flash memory )."〕 was awarded in 1999, followed up with an additional FlashFX-related patent, "Method and system for managing bad areas in flash memory",〔United States Patent 6260156: "(Method and system for managing bad areas in flash memory )."〕 in 2001. In 2003, Reliance, a reliable transactional embedded file system, was released; a related patent, "Reliable file system and method of providing the same",〔United States Patent 7284101: "(Reliable file system and method of providing the same )."〕 was awarded in 2007. In 2013, another file system related patent, “Method and Apparatus for Fault-tolerant Memory Management”〔United States Patent 8572036: "(Method and Apparatus for Fault-tolerant Memory Management )."〕 was issued. In 2009 Datalight released FlashFX Tera to support the growing size and complexity of NAND flash arrays. That same year, Reliance Nitro was released, building upon Reliance and adding a tree-based architecture to improve performance for large files (>100 MB) and large numbers of files. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Datalight」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|