Nov 22 2010
Costa Mesa-headquartered Irvine Sensors Corporation proclaimed that their company’s EAGLE-10 blade system has efficiently identified the faux cyber-security threats and prevailing inconsistencies occurring in Internet traffic during the third-party confirmation of EAGLE-10's operation, funded by U.S. government agencies.
The company’s EAGLE-10 employs its proprietary chip-stacking methodology and optical input/output (I/O) interfaces, allowing constant complete-packet examination of Internet I/O information streams to track anomalies and illegal invasions, rather than simply inspecting periodic samples. The third-party inspection has certified EAGLE-10’s potential for delivering numerous models of cyber protection software.
According to John Carson, CEO of Irvine Sensors, the aggressive third-party analysis have approved the capability of EAGLE systems, structured from a firmware-oriented computational design coupled with the company’s 3-D capacitive access technology.
Irvine Sensors is further expanding its EAGLE product series to attain speeds of 40 and 100 gigabits per second for government purposes, especially cyber security. The company is focusing on providing the accession of their EAGLE solutions to other crucial consumers and has initialized its proposals with the agencies that are concerned about functioning as BETA domains for illustrating commercial utilities of the EAGLE systems. These products act as a rapid processing stage for integrating a broad series of firmware.
Irvine Sensors also advances various tiny sensors, high density electronics, high speed network security, image processing, optical interconnection technology and reduced-power analog and combined-signal integrated circuits for wide system applications.