From WikiChip
Difference between revisions of "alchemy"
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In January 1, [[2002]] AMD announced its plans to acquire Alchemy in order to compete against [[Intel]]'s {{intel|XScale}}. | In January 1, [[2002]] AMD announced its plans to acquire Alchemy in order to compete against [[Intel]]'s {{intel|XScale}}. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Processor families == | ||
+ | * {{alchemy|Au1000}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Microarchitecture == | ||
+ | * {{alchemy|Au1|l=arch}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Documents == | ||
+ | * [[:File:Au1000 Internet Edge Processor presentation.ppt|Au1000 Internet Edge Processor presentation]] |
Revision as of 22:19, 27 January 2018
Alchemy Semiconductor was an American fabless semiconductor company that specialized in developing low-power MIPS microprocessor designs.
Alchemy was founded in Austin, Texas, in 1999 with an investment Cadence Design Systems, Inc. The original Alchemy development team consisted of former DEC Alpha and StrongARM engineers. In May 2000, Alchemy Semiconductor became a solely independent company through funding from US Venture Partners (USVP), Austin Ventures, and Telos Ventures.
In January 1, 2002 AMD announced its plans to acquire Alchemy in order to compete against Intel's XScale.
Processor families
Microarchitecture
Documents
Facts about "Alchemy Semiconductor"
company type | private + |
defunct | 2002 + |
fate | Acquired by AMD + |
founded | 1999 + |
founded location | Austin, Texas + |
founder | Greg Hoeppner +, Phil Pompa +, Rich Witek +, Jim Montanaro +, Richard Reis + and Ray Stephany + |
full page name | alchemy + |
headquarters | Austin, Texas + |
instance of | semiconductor company + |
name | Alchemy Semiconductor + |
website | http://www.alchemysemi.com + |
wikidata id | Q22009884 + |