Timeline Summary

  In the Year 2015  
Microchip acquires Micrel

August 3, 2015,  Microchip announced that Microchip has completed its acquisition of Micrel. Shareholders of Micrel overwhelmingly approved the merger with 98.95% of the Micrel shares that voted in favor of the merger. Microchip paid an aggregate of approximately $430 million in cash and issued an aggregate of over 8 Million shares of its common stock to Micrel shareholders.

Intel Completes $16.7 Billion Buy of Altera

Intel and Altera announced on June 1, 2015, that they had entered into a definitive agreement under which Intel would acquire Altera for $54 per share in an all-cash transaction valued at approximately $16.7 billion. The transaction closed December 28, 2015. The acquisition was expected to couple Intel’s leading-edge products and manufacturing process with Altera’s leading field-programmable gate array (FPGA) technology in order to enable new classes of products that meet customer needs in the data center and Internet of Things (IoT) market segments.

Intel began to offer Altera’s FPGA products with Intel Xeon® processors as highly customized, integrated products. The companies also enhanced Altera’s products through design and manufacturing improvements resulting from Intel’s integrated device manufacturing mode

INTEL acquires ALTERA in the largest Intel transaction to date

Altera and Intel announced on June 1, 2015 that they have agreed that Intel would acquire Altera in an all-cash transaction valued at approximately $16.7 billion. As of December 28, 2015, the acquisition had been completed

Intel plans to let Altera operate as a new business unit that will keep the Altera brand and some operations that are foreign to Intel. Though future Altera chips will be made in Intel factories, for example, existing products will continue to be manufactured by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co

HellermannTyton becomes part of Delphi

In July 2015 Delphi Automotive made an offer to buy the company for $1.7 billion. The acquisition was completed on 18 December 2015 and HellermannTyton became constituent part of Delphi's Electrical/Electronic Architecture division

Infineon acquires International Rectifier

Munich, Germany, and El Segundo, California – January 13, 2015 – Infineon Technologies AG announced the closing of the $3 billion dollar acquisition of International Rectifier.

Atmel turns downs offer from Cypress Atmel receives offers from both Cypress Semiconductor and Dialog Semiconductor and rejects them both

Vitesse Semi is acquired by Microsemi Corporation

Did you know?

  • When Werner Von Siemens, co-founder of Seimens, summited an egyptian pyramid, he stumbled accross a phenomina and with material in his lunchbox used the static charge to create a Layden jar which began to spark. His Arab guides, assuming whichcraft quickly attempted to seize Seimens companion. Seimen thought quickly and shocked the guide with the charge, throwing him to the ground. The Arab guide quickly fled and Seimen fled the territory to escape the retaliation.
  • Fairchild Semi was founded by 8 key ex employees of Shockley Semiconductor and about a decade later the pattern repeated as 8 key employees left Fairchild Semi to form competing company AMD. 

     

  • Hitachi's logo was inspired by Japans imperial rising sun flag. The name Hitachi is actually comprised of the two words hi meaning “sun” and tachi meaning “rise”. 

     

  • Mostek makes a Mistake. In age when Jobs and Wozniak were founding Apple , one company owned rights to the processors used in both the Apple and the IBM computers. In fact Mostek had secured the rights to every microprocessor family of importance, including the the Zilog Z80, Intel x86, and Mot 68000. However, Mostek did very little to leaverage their position and after years of financial troubles, would eventually be forced to sell out. 

    Itallian company, Thomson acted quickly purchasing Mostek and immediately opened several lawsuits around their newly acquired intellectual property portfolio. Thomson went on collected over $430 million in royalties. That same year, the semiconductor division of Thomson merged with SGS Microelecttronica to become STMicroelectronics.

  • Within a two year period, both Intel and AMD were started by small groups of rogue FSC employees who relied on one another to gain market share against FSC. 

  • The worlds quickest engineer took Tesla to the finish line! Racecar driver Ze'ev Drori was previously an engineer at FSC and the founder of MMI Monolythic Memories. The rubber hit the road in 2007 when Drori became CEO of Tesla Motors and earned the title as the man who turned around Tesla. 

  • One mans head cold froze the entire industry!   Unbeknownst to one another, all chip makers used the same diamond-tipped saws to slice ignots into silicon wafers. As it turns out, only one man was producing all of these saws in his garage and in the 70's, he took some sick days off,  interupting the entire global chip supply market. 

  • The Mitsubishi logo is nuts! Three chestnuts, to be exact. Mitsu translates to three and bishi translates to water chestnut or rhombus. The logo is three diamond chestnuts.

  • Sanyo and Matsushita are related by marriage (or their founders are)! The owner of Sanyo got started in his brother in-law\\\'s plant…. Matsushita

  • A group of competitors came together in a venture to begin the Next eXPerience, and would call this experience the NXP

  • Back in the days when radios were still Violas, a small company ventured to make a Viola that was compatible with Motor Vehicles. They received the reputation for Motor Viola and would soon after take on the name Motorola. 

     

  • Gordon and Robert made a fortune selling more noise! Moor Noyce was the original desired name for Intel but after some careful consideration, founders Gordon Moore and Robert Noyce agreed that it might be better to just abbreviate as MN Electronics. Still unsatisfied, they moved to the name Integrated Electronics Corporation and eventually shortened it to INTEL. 

  • At just 30 years old, the legendary Robert Norton Noyce, AKA the \"Mayor of Silicon Valley\", co-founded Fairchild Semiconductor and a decade later founded the Intel Corporation

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