By Ed Sperling
Synopsys expanded its Discovery verification platform with a regression and analysis extension called CustomExplorer Ultra. The focus is analog and mixed signal, which is a hot topic these days with the momentum over 2.5D stacked die with interposers. Case in point: Texas Instrument’s purchase of National Semiconductor.
TSMC filed its annual 2010 report with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The report shows that 2010 sales hit a record $14.5 billion, up 68% over 2009. Net income was $5.68 billion, an increase of 84% year over year. The foundry noted in the filing that capital expenditures this year will total about $7.8 billion, an amount that may fluctuate depending on market conditions. It plans to add capacity to its 300mm and 200mm wafer fabs, develop process technologies at 28, 20 and 14nm, and invest in solar and LED production facilities. Also of note is that fabless companies accounted for 79% of 2010 sales compared with 80% in 2009.
Intel showed remarkable resilience in its earnings, as well. GAAP revenue for 2010 was $12.8 billion, up 25% over 2009. Net income was $3.2 billion, up 29% over the previous year. For the first quarter, Intel’s data center group showed the strongest growth, up 32%. Atom sales were up 4% to $370 million.
Those numbers coincide with strong sales growth at IBM, which got a boost from increased mainframe sales, and at Apple, which was bolstered by both iPhone sales over the Verizon network and new Mac sales. The iPhone uptick helped Qualcomm, as well.