HOUSTON — March 11, 2009 —
BPM announces that it will exhibit its manual Flas
hstream Flash Vector
Programming System in booth 1274 at the upcoming APEX 2009 exhibition
and conference, scheduled to take place March 31-April 2, 2009 in Las
Vegas.
Flashstream offers the fastest flash
programming of NAND and NOR flash memory at speeds as low as 2.5
percent over theoretical programming minimum. This industry leading
speed is due to the creation of a proprietary co-processor technology
developed by BPM called Vector Engine. This technology uses a
proprietary co-processor design to hardware accelerate flash memory
waveforms during the programming cycle. Faster speeds are achieved
through synchronous operations that eliminate the dead times when the
DUT waits on the programmer. The result is programming near the
theoretical limits of the silicon design — the faster the device, the
faster the device is programmed.
Designed for high-density flash, the
Flashstream programs NAND and NOR Flash up to 32 Gb (gigabit) and has
upgradeable RAM for future densities. It comes standard with 4191 Mb
(32.7 Gb) memory per site that is upgradeable to handle future
densities and communicates with USB 2.0 between the host PC and
programmer. The programmer also includes bad block replacement scheme
for NAND and low voltage support. A four-socket manual system,
Flashstream is BPM’s first dedicated hardware design for flash
memories, which results in a radical improvement in speed when compared
to competitive flash programmers.
As an additional benefit, multiple
Flashstream units can be connected to one computer to run the same
programming job in concurrent programming™ mode. Single units can be
mechanically connected. Also, a LED display identifies the programmer
number that corresponds to software instructions.
Featuring the capability to program with
one, two, three or four socket cards, the Flashstream offers the only
single socket card purchase for first article qualification. It is easy
to remove and stores with little space. Additionally, it includes
Active, Pass and Fail LED status indicators on each individual socket
card, as well as the option of Auto-start on continuity check.
Flashstream will significantly help the
production of embedded designs in electronic products by reducing ramp
to volume production fears for products that integrate high-density
flash memory such as wireless devices, navigation electronics and
personal music systems. Now, it enables new applications, especially
for very large patterns.
Additionally, these systems can leave the factory with preloaded data or content instead of blank memory.
The Flashstream programmer has the capacity
to support NAND and NOR flash memory devices as well as EPROMs. New
device requests will be taken for Flashstream and distributed to all
Flashstream customers under software contract.
The Flashstream’s significant speed reduces
labor costs as well as the number of machines needed to perform the
same function. The programmer is ready for both today’s and tomorrow’s
most demanding flash devices.
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