NXP recently announced the LPC31xx family of microcontrollers, combining High Speed USB 2.0 OTG functionality, PHY, and dedicated PLL. The single chip LPC31xx also offers 180/266Mhz ARM926EJ, 96KB SRAM, a NAND flash controller, flexible external bus interface, four channel 10-bit A/D and a myriad of serial and parallel interfaces targeted at the consumer, industrial, medical, and communication markets. During this Webinar I will provide an overview of the LPC31xx’s key features and benefits, and listeners will also have the opportunity to submit questions. I look forward to your participation.
About NXP Semiconductors
NXP is a leading semiconductor company founded by Philips more than 50 years ago. Headquartered in Europe, the company has about 28,000 employees working in more than 30 countries and posted sales of USD 5.4 billion (including the Mobile & Personal business) in 2008. NXP creates semiconductors, system solutions and software that deliver better sensory experiences in TVs, set-top boxes, identification applications, mobile phones, cars and a wide range of other electronic devices. News from NXP is located at www.nxp.com.
Speaker
Chew Thing Piao is a Senior Marketing Manager for the Multimarket Semiconductor business unit within NXP, the independent semiconductor company founded by Philips more than 50 years ago. In this role, he is responsible for marketing management, driving strategic sales programs, and creating value propositions and pricing for the South Asia Pacific region. The most popular products for these markets include chips used in a wide variety of applications, including consumer electronics, computing, communications, automotive and industrial.
Chew Thing Piao began his career at NXP Semiconductors (then Philips Semiconductors) in October 1994 as an application engineer in the Application Lab located in Singapore. He assumed his current position as Senior Marketing Manager for the Multimarket Semiconductors business in March 2008.
Chew Thing Piao holds an Honors Degree in Electrical & Electronics Engineering from Bradford University, UK and is based in Singapore.