Home » 2011 » January

Monthly Archives: January 2011

2010 semi sales fail to top $300bn but exceed 30% growth forecast, says SIA

The 2010 semiconductor market did not top $300bn as was widely expected, says the SIA, instead it came in at $298.3bn. However the annual growth did meet general expectations by topping 30%. The SIA puts it at 31.8% up from the $226.3bn recorded for 2009. The SIA put Q4 sales at $75.5bn representing a 4% decline on Q3. For December, ...

Fujitsu signs broad corporate multi-year licence with Tensilica

Tensilica today announced that Fujitsu has signed a multi-year corporate license for Tensilica’s audio, baseband DSP and dataplane processor units (DPUs), which are a combination of DSP and embedded control processor cores for SOC design. The contract gives access to Tensilica IP cores for all Fujitsu divisions. “It’s a big broad corporate licence with a very wide scope,” Chris Rowen, ...

Helluva Year For Programmables

The programmable logic market first hit $3 billion in 2000, and it didn’t make $4 billion until 2010, according to Ed Lepkowski of L-Mar Associates.

Xilinx acquires ESL firm to make FPGAs easier to use

itemid-510-getasset.jpg

Xilinx plans to add System C high level design to its 6- and 7-series FPGA families with the acquisition of design tool firm AutoESL Design Technologies. According to Tom Feist, a senior marketing director at Xilinx, the use of level-higher design synthesis in System C, as well as C and C++, will “address the ease of use issues” which have ...

Powerchip becomes DRAM foundry for Elpida

Powerchip of Taiwan is to drop selling proprietary DRAM in favour of acting as a DRAM foundry for Elpida. The deal allows Elpida to increase its DRAM sales without having to make any additional investment in capex. ‘It will allow both companies to focus on their core competencies,’ says Elpida, ‘Elpida’s sales and marketing and technology development strengths, and Powerchip’s ...

ARM announces Cortex-R5 and Cortex-R7

itemid-54299-getasset.jpg

ARM has added Cortex-R5 and Cortex-R7 to its range of processors for hard real-time embedded processing. They offer 750 and 1,250DMips respectively for baseband processing in phones, where they are expected to take over from ARM9 and ARM11 in 3.5G, 3.9G and 4G phones. R5 is similar to the preceding Cortex-R4, with changes to simplify programming – largely adding automatic ...