ARM to set Standard For Next-Generation MCU’s By Acquiring Triscend
CAMBRIDGE, UK – Jan. 27, 2004 - ARM [(LSE:ARM); (Nasdaq:ARMHY)], the industry’s leading provider of 16/32-bit embedded RISC microprocessor solutions, today announced it has entered into an agreement to acquire Triscend Corporation, a pioneer and leader in configurable system-on-chip (CSoC) devices and customizable microcontrollers (MCUs). The completion of the acquisition is subject to the fulfillment of certain conditions including approval by the shareholders of Triscend.
Founded in 1997, Triscend is a 41-person, privately-held, venture capital-funded company based in Mountain View, Calif. The company’s single-chip platform delivers a ready-to-customize system-on-chip (SoC) with the flexibility of a field-programmable device and the price point of a standard product.
“Given the industry trend for upgrading 8- and 16-bit MCU designs, ARM believes the 32-bit MCU market will grow substantially over the next few years,” said Warren East, CEO, ARM. “By investing in this market now with the acquisition of Triscend, the ARM Partnership will be well positioned to take advantage of the anticipated growth.”
The acquisition will bring ARM customer-proven MCU platform designs and supporting tools, enabling the company to deliver 32-bit microcontroller solutions to satisfy increasing demand as engineers move to higher performance designs. ARM will be able to proliferate the ARM architecture by selling configurable MCUs to OEMs for emerging applications. A new Program, to be launched within the existing ARM Partner Programs, will also offer a seamless migration path to take matured MCU designs into ARM Partners’ standard products and ASIC programs for high-volume applications.
“ARM is widely recognized as the leading innovator in microprocessor IP and is the ideal company to move our technology forward. With the rise in costs of ASIC design at 90 nanometers, we believe configurable MCU platforms will become a key solution which will benefit our mutual customers,” said Reynette Au, CEO, Triscend Corporation.
About ARM
ARM is the industry’s leading provider of 16/32-bit embedded RISC microprocessor solutions. The company licenses its high-performance, low-cost, power-efficient RISC processors, peripherals, and system-chip designs to leading international electronics companies. ARM also provides comprehensive support required in developing a complete system. ARM’s microprocessor cores are rapidly becoming a volume RISC standard in such markets as portable communications, hand-held computing, multimedia digital consumer and embedded solutions. More information on ARM is available at http://www.arm.com
ENDS
ARM is a registered trademark of ARM Limited. All other brands or product names are the property of their respective holders. “ARM” is used to represent ARM Holdings plc (LSE: ARM and Nasdaq: ARMHY); its operating company ARM Limited; and the regional subsidiaries ARM INC.; ARM KK; ARM Korea Ltd.; ARM Taiwan; ARM France SAS; ARM Consulting (Shanghai) Co. Ltd.; and ARM Belgium N.V.
Related Semiconductor IP
- AES-GCM - Authenticated Encryption and Decryption
- AES-GCM Authenticated Encryption and Decryption
- AES-GCM - Authenticated Encryption and Decryption
- Verification IP for C-PHY
- Band-Gap Voltage Reference with dual 2µA Current Source - X-FAB XT018
Related News
- IAR Systems enables next generation automotive applications with NXP's S32K3 MCU family
- Cycuity Sets New Standard for Semiconductor Chip Security Assurance with Next Generation of Radix Technology
- Fifth generation ARM Cortex-X for 3nm AI chip designs
- GigaDevice Semiconductor expands its Arm MCU product roadmap through Arm Total Access
Latest News
- Lattice to Acquire AMI, Creating the Industry’s Most Complete Secure Management and Control Platform
- Global Semiconductor Sales Increase 25% from Q4 2025 to Q1 2026
- Tord Larsson-Steen appointed new CEO of Shortlink
- GUC Collaborate with Wiwynn to Advance Silicon-to-System Infrastructure for Next-Generation Hyperscale AI
- Two Weebit Nano product customers tape-out; one already demonstrating a functional prototype