Website www.windriver.com Founder Jerry Fiddler | Key people Jim Douglas, President Number of employees 1,800 Founded 1981 | |
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Revenue 359.7 million USD (FY ended Jan 31 2009) Subsidiaries Wind River Sales Co., Inc., Wind River Services Inc Profiles |
Wind River is a subsidiary company of Intel providing embedded system software which comprises run-time software, industry-specific software solutions, simulation technology, development tools and middleware. On June 4, 2009, Wind River announced that Intel had bought the company for a reported $884 million. Wind River continues to exist as a wholly owned subsidiary of Intel. Its product portfolio is supported by global professional services and support, and a broad partner ecosystem.
Contents
- History
- VxWorks
- Wind River Linux
- Wind River Diab Compiler
- Tilcon Graphics Suite
- Simics
- Wind River Titanium Server
- Edge Management System
- BSDOS
- Awards
- Acquisitions
- Competitors
- Sponsorship
- References
Wind River concentrates on middleware: software and operating systems for information appliances and devices for intelligent connected systems. Wind River's technologies are used in a wide range of markets including: Aerospace & Defense, Automotive, Energy, Industrial, Medical, Consumer Electronics and Networking & Communications. Their products are used in industrial and transportation systems such as factory automation, robotics, rail transport, smart grids; military systems such as unmanned vehicles and military communications, telecommunication infrastructure equipment such as routers; automotive systems such as connected in-vehicle infotainment, digital cluster displays, telematics, braking systems; consumer devices such as multifunction printers. digital cameras, projectors, set-top boxes, traffic signals aircraft and aerospace systems such as Mars rovers MER-A and MER-B.
Among their flagship products are the VxWorks real-time operating system, the Wind River Linux operating system, and the Eclipse-based Wind River Workbench IDE. VxWorks began as an add-on to the VRTX operating system in the early 1980s. Wind River Workbench superseded the previous Tornado environment.
Wind River's head offices are located at 500 Wind River Way, Alameda, California. The company's corporate umbrella message is focused on the critical role of software for the Internet of Things (IoT).
History
Wind River Systems was formed by a partnership of Jerry Fiddler and Dave Wilner. In 1981, Fiddler had come out of Berkeley Labs to write software for control systems, but wanted to pursue a career in computer generated music, which he funded through a consultancy business focused on real-time. His early clients included the National Football League and film director Francis Ford Coppola — for whom he designed a unique film editing system. Wilner, a former colleague at Berkeley, joined Fiddler and they formed a partnership called Wind River Systems (named after Wind River, Wyoming, where Fiddler had vacationed that year).
Some of the key milestones are:
VxWorks
VxWorks is the original flagship product of Wind River. It is a real-time operating system intended for embedded devices. It runs on many architectures, and supports features such as SMP, IPv6, TIPC and memory protection.
Wind River Linux
Wind River's Linux product is source code and a build system that generate runtime images suitable for embedded devices. It supports a variety of architectures, including ARM, MIPS, PowerPC, IA32 and SPARC.
In 2004, Wind River announced a partnership with Red Hat to create a new Linux-based distribution for embedded devices. Wind River has since ended its partnership with Red Hat and now ships its own Linux distribution optimized for embedded Linux development.
Wind River released the first version of its embedded Linux distribution, Platform for Network Equipment - Linux Edition (PNE-LE) 1.0 in 2005. It was registered against the Carrier Grade Linux 2.0 specification and supported IA32 and PPC architectures. They added other platforms in subsequent releases, General Purpose Platform - Linux Edition (GPP-LE) and Platform for Consumer Devices - Linux Edition PCD-LE) starting in version 1.4. In 2013 Wind River announced Wind River Linux 6.0.
Wind River Systems acquired FSMLabs embedded technology in February 2007 and made a version available as Wind River Real-Time Core for Wind River Linux. As of August 2011, Wind River has discontinued the Wind River Real-Time Core product line, effectively ending commercial support for the RTLinux product.
On August 7, 2007, Palm Inc. announced that it had chosen Wind River Systems as the software solution for its (later aborted) Palm Foleo.
In 2008, Wind River announced cooperation with BMW, Intel and Magneti Marelli for development of a Linux-based open-source platform to control in-car electronics, which was extended in the GENIVI Alliance in 2009.
In 2012, Wind River introduced a new version of Wind River Linux that was developed from the Yocto Projectâ„¢ open source development infrastructure and has achieved Yocto Project Compatible registration.
Wind River (Diab) Compiler
Wind River acquired Dataindustrier AB's Diab Compiler as part of its acquisition of Integrated Systems Inc. Originally designed by Wind River's former CTO, Tomas Evensen, it is now available as part of Wind River's VxWorks platforms. It can also be licensed separately for non-VxWorks users. The compiler supports PowerPC, ARM, MIPS, SH, ColdFire, TriCore, Intel, and more architectures.
Tilcon Graphics Suite
Tilcon Software Limited was acquired by Wind River in 2009. The Tilcon software consists of a graphical user interface builder - a tool that runs on a Windows or Linux host - and a GUI engine that runs on an embedded processor that renders graphics through a number of different standard graphics libraries. The Tilcon software supports VxWorks, Linux and Windows operating systems.
Simics
The Simics full-system simulator was added to Wind River's product portfolio after the acquisition of Virtutech by Intel in 2010.
Wind River Titanium Server
Introduced in 2014, the Wind River Titanium Server provides a Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) software platform used by network equipment suppliers to build NFV equipment. The product is based on Wind River Open Virtualization and includes Wind River Linux, an optimized real-time Kernel-Based Virtual Machine (KVM++), Intel Data Plane Development Kit (Intel DPDK), accelerated vSwitch technologies and carrier grade enhancements to OpenStack. The server provides the following basic capabilities:
Edge Management System
The Edge Management System is a pre-integrated software stack that runs from the embedded device up through the cloud to reduce product development times and total cost of ownership. It is a white-label offering of PTC solution (formerly Axeda) i.e. it uses PTC to provide this service. The system is validated to work out-of-the-box with all Intel Internet of Things (IoT) platform components, as well as other IoT vendors' components. The Edge Management System agent enables cloud connectivity to facilitate capabilities such as data capture, rules-based data analysis and response, configuration, and file transfer. It allows customers to quickly build industry-specific IoT solutions and integrate disparate enterprise IT systems, utilizing application programming interface (API) management.
BSD/OS
Wind River acquired the software assets of Berkeley Software Design Inc. (BSDI) in 2001. These comprised the BSD/OS operating system, plus involvement in the FreeBSD open source project. The FreeBSD unit was divested as a separate entity in 2002 as FreeBSD Mall, Inc.
Faced with competition from the open source FreeBSD and Linux-based operating systems, Wind River discontinued BSD/OS in December 2003. However, by this time some technology from BSD/OS had been contributed to the open source BSD community.
Awards
Wind River's recent achievements have been recognized in 2014 by winning numerous awards. The company won the Carrier Network Virtualization Award for Network Functions Virtualization (NFV) Innovation for its Wind River Titanium Server. The award recognizes excellence and outstanding technologies developed for the NFV and Software-defined networking (SDN) industry. The introduction of the Wind River Titanium Server was deemed to 'revolutionize' the market by making carrier network virtualization a reality.
For the sixth consecutive year, VDC Research recognized Wind River as the embedded Linux market leader for its Wind River Linux platform. The VDC study which covered the global market for commercially available real time operating systems (RTOS) and non-real-time operating systems, determined that Wind River led the market for worldwide shipments of both RTOS and embedded Linux, and related services. According to VDC, Wind River retains its longstanding position as the traditional RTOS market leader for its portfolio of embedded products and services, led by its VxWorks RTOS.
Wind River was recognized three times in 2014 for excellence in customer and employee satisfaction: it was named a 2014 Confirmit ACE award winner for excellence in customer satisfaction, employee satisfaction, and partner satisfaction; it was recognized as a 'Top Workplace' by Bay Area News Group in which employee satisfaction surveys ranked Wind River among the top 100 Bay Area companies; and for the eighth consecutive year, its customer support organization achieved certification under the Service Capability & Performance (SCP) Standards. The SCP Standards quantify the effectiveness of customer support and services based upon a stringent set of performance criteria and represent the best practices in the industry.
In 2015 TMCnet News reported that Wind River won a 2014 M2M Evolution Internet of Things (IoT) Excellence Award for its excellence and leadership in the evolution of the IoT for the Wind River Edge Management System. This award honors innovative products that support the collection and analysis of information to improve business and personal decision-making.
Acquisitions
Competitors
As of 2009, their competitors include:
Sponsorship
Wind River sponsors the Bay Area Science and Innovation Consortium (BASIC) WonderCup Challenge, a San Francisco Bay Area science knowledge competition for high school students.