Sunday, May 9, 2010

Cirrus Logic


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Brief History

Patil Systems, Inc., is founded in Salt Lake City in 1981, by Dr. Suhas Patil and renamed as Cirrus Logic when it moved to Silicon Valley in 1984 to focus on solutions for the growing PC components market. Michael Hackworth was named president and chief executive officer in January 1985, and served as CEO until February 1999. It joined the Nasdaq market listing in 1989 (symbol: CRUS). Cirrus Logic acquired Crystal Semiconductor, a leading supplier of analog and mixed-signal converter ICs, in 1991. In the early 1990s, Cirrus Logic became a leading supplier of PC graphics chips, audio converters and chips for magnetic storage products. David D. French joined Cirrus Logic, Inc., as president and chief operating officer in June 1998 and was named chief executive officer in February 1999. Soon after joining the company, through an acquisition strategy Mr. French repositioned the company into a premier supplier of high-performance analog and digital processing chip solutions for consumer entertainment electronics. In June 2005, Cirrus Logic sold its video products operation to an investment firm, creating privately-owned Magnum Semiconductor. After resigning in March 2007, Jason Rhode, formerly the vice president and general manager of Cirrus' Mixed Signal Audio Division, was named president and CEO in May 2007. Today, Cirrus Logic is focused on its high-precision technologies for digital signal processing components for audio and energy markets.

Timeline of key events patch panel cat 5e

1981 Patil Systems Inc. is founded in Salt Lake City by Dr. Suhas Patil. Company focuses on IC solutions for the growing PC components market. cat5 patch panel

1984 Patil Systems Inc. renamed Cirrus Logic and moves headquarters to Silicon Valley 5e patch panel

1989 Company goes public and is listed on the Nasdaq exchange under the ticker symbol CRUS.

1991 Cirrus Logic acquires Crystal Semiconductor, a leading supplier of analog and mixed-signal converter ICs.

1996 Cirrus Logic exits from the PC graphics card business

1998 David D. French joins company as president and chief operating officer in June and becomes chief executive officer in February 1999. In the fall, company spins out its communication business unit.

2001 Cirrus Logic announces plan to begin exit from magnetic storage chip business.

2001 Cirrus Logic acquires several start-up companies with technologies in video decoding, video encoding, wireless networking, and networked digital audio.

2003 Cirrus Logic closes wireless networking operations.

2005 Cirrus Logic sells video product assets to investment firm, creating Magnum Semiconductor (company maintains minority equity position).

2007 Jason Rhode, formerly vice president and general manager of Cirrus' Mixed-Signal Audio division, is named president and chief executive officer, replacing French who resigned in March. In July, Cirrus Logic acquires Apex Microtechnology, a leading provider of high-power products for industrial and aerospace markets.

Graphics history

CL-GD5429 VLB

In the early 1990s, Cirrus Logic was a leading supplier of low-cost PC graphics chips. Cirrus's Microsoft Windows 2D GUI accelerators (GDI) were among the fastest in the low-end market-segment, outperforming competing VGA-chips from Oak Technologies, Trident Microsystems, and Paradise (Western Digital). For example, the Cirrus GD5422 (1992) supported hardware acceleration for both 8-bit color and 16-bit color. It was one of the lowest-priced SVGA controllers to support both.

By the mid-1990s, when PC's had migrated to the PCI bus, Cirrus had fallen behind S3 and Trident Microsystems. When the announced release date of the GD5470 "Mondello" came and went, Cirrus's reputation in desktop PC-graphics suffered. (Mondello would have been the company's first 3D-accelerator, but instead became vaporware.)

The company's final graphics chips, the GD546x "Laguna" series of PCI/AGP 3D-accelerators, were novel in that they were one of the few video cards to use Rambus RDRAM. However, like many other 2D/3D chips at the time, the feature set of perspective-correct texture mapping, bilinear filtering, single-pass lighting, gouraud shading, and alpha blending, was both slow and incomplete.

Graphics chipsets

CL-GD5464 "Laguna 3D"

DESKTOP

CL-GD410 + 420 - ISA SVGA chipset, Video 7 VEGA VGA (1987)

CL-GD510 + 520 - ISA SVGA "Eagle II" chipset, known for 100% CGA emulation. (1988)

CL-GD5320 - ISA SVGA chipset. (1990)

CL-GD5401 - ISA SVGA chipset, also known as Acumos VGA (AVGA1)

CL-GD5402 - ISA SVGA chipset, also known as Acumos VGA (AVGA2)

CL-GD5410 - ISA SVGA chipset, Low-to-mid-end DRAM-based cards (accelerated), some laptop chipsets. Known for integrating graphic card components into one chip (built-in RAMDAC and clock generators) at an early point. (1991)

CL-GD5420 - ISA SVGA chipset, highly integrated (15 bit RAMDAC + PLL), 1 MB.

CL-GD5421 - ISA SVGA chipset, highly integrated (15/16 bit RAMDAC + PLL), 1 MB.

CL-GD5422 - Enhanced version of the 5420 (32-bit internal memory interface, 15/16/24 bit RAMDAC. An ISA video card carrying this chipset offered 1280x1024 interlaced max resolution).

CL-GD5424 - VLB version of the 5422, but resembles the 5426 in some respects.

CL-GD5425 - True color VGA controller w/ TV out.

CL-GD5426 - Hardware BitBLT engine. ISA bus and VLB up to 2 MB of memory.

CL-GD5428 - Enhanced version of the 5426. Faster BITBLT engine.

CL-GD5429 - Enhanced version of the 5428; supports higher memory clock and has memory-mapped I/O.

CL-GD5430 - Similar to 5429, but with 543x core (32-bit host interface).

CL-GD5434 - Alpine family chip with 64-bit internal memory interface. Only supports 64-bit mode if equipped with 2 MB of video memory; commonly equipped with 1 MB, extendable to 2 MB.

CL-GD5436 - An optimized 5434.

CL-GD5440 - 5430 with motion-video acceleration. (CL-GD54M40 has integrated filters.)

CL-GD5446 - 64-bit Alpine VisualMedia accelerator. 2D-only; adds motion-video acceleration to the CL-GD5436.

CL-GD546X - The Laguna VisualMedia family of 2D, 3D, and video accelerators. '64 and '65 include 3D acceleration. (PCI, AGP). These chips use a single channel of RDRAM memory, providing up to 600 MB/s bandwidth. The '62 lacks 3D acceleration. All include a BitBLT engine, video windows, and 64x64 hardware cursor.

CL-GD5480 - 64-bit Alpine accelerator with 100 MHz SGRAM

MOBILE

CL-GD610 + 620 - (1989)

CL-GD6420/6440 Used in some laptops, similar to older Cirrus chipsets (5410/AVGA2).

CL-GD6205/6215/6225/6235 - Compatible with the 5420.

CL-GD7541/7542/7543/7548 - Compatible with the 5428/3x.

See also

Graphics card

Graphics processing unit

References

^ "Company Profile for Cirrus Logic Inc (CRUS)". http://www.zenobank.com/index.php?symbol=CRUS&page=quotesearch. Retrieved 2008-10-23. 

External links

Cirrus Web Site

Categories: Companies listed on NASDAQ | Fabless semiconductor companies | Graphics hardware companies | Companies established in 1981 | Companies based in Austin, TexasHidden categories: Articles needing cleanup from October 2007 | All pages needing cleanup

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