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Welcome to Wireless Communications


Module combines four receivers in one

Receiver module is the first to integrate a Wi-Fi, DAB and FM front-end together with an onboard Wi-Fi antenna.Frontier Silicon has launched the world's first 'four-in-one' module capable or receiving Internet radio, DAB, FM and music streamed from a PC. The new module, called Venice 6, is the first product to integrate a Wi-Fi, DAB and FM front-end together with an onboard Wi-Fi antenna in a single module. It enables audio manufacturers to easily produce low-cost, feature-rich, radios for the global market, bringing thousands of Internet radio stations and music streaming to a new generation of affordable, easy-to-use home DAB/FM radios via household Wi-Fi.

Applications using the module will include portable and alarm clock radios as well as CD microsystems, boomboxes and hi-fi tuners, and are expected in the shops by July 2007.

With a compact 107 x 40mm footprint, Venice 6 is based around Frontier Silicon's powerful Chorus 2i processor.

It streams radio stations and music files in a variety of formats and protocols including MP3, Windows Media Audio (WMA), and Real Audio.

The module integrates an intuitive user interface which enables an easy navigation scheme to switch between the four different modes of operation (Internet Radio, music playback, DAB, FM).

It provides access to over 10,000 Internet radio stations plus a wide selection of podcasts with only a few key presses, accessed through a vTuner Internet portal which manages all the stations to ensure quality and reliability of the available content.

Besides working with the existing DAB standard which uses the MPEG Audio Layer II coding, Venice 6 will also support the new additional audio codec, sometimes referred to as DAB version 2.

The module comes with a front-end that supports both Band III and L-band reception, which allows manufacturers to bring to market truly global DAB radios which can be introduced into all DAB markets, regardless of transmission band used, or version of DAB standard adopted.

'Audio manufacturers want to build products that can be used and sold anywhere in the world'.

'With the fragmentation of broadcast radio standards this has been a difficult goal to achieve - until Frontier introduced the Venice 6 module', said Steve Evans, Frontier Silicon's VP of Digital Audio.

'By bringing Wi-Fi radio, music streaming, DAB and FM together into one compact and cost effective module, Venice 6 makes global audio products a reality'.

'DAB v2 is attracting significant interest from broadcasters outside of the UK so it makes sense for us to include this capability to allow manufacturers to easily address this part of the market with Venice 6', added Evans.

Unlike other broadcasting standards which vary from country to country, Internet radio products are not constrained by geographic location.

According to an independent report from Lehman Brothers Research, worldwide broadband market will account for approximately 350 million connections by 2009, with 60% of connections made through a Wi-Fi link.

The report suggests a potential total available market of over 10 million Wi-Fi radio units by 2009.