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Synopsys

Coordinates: 37°23′32″N 122°02′50″W / 37.3921°N 122.0471°W / 37.3921; -122.0471
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Not to be confused with Synopsis
Synopsys, Inc.
Company typePublic
IndustrySoftware & Programming
Founded1986
Headquarters Mountain View, California
Key people
Aart J. de Geus, CEO/Chairman
Chi-Foon Chan, President/COO
RevenueIncrease $1,336.0 million USD (FY 2008)
Increase $190.0 million USD (FY 2008)
Number of employees
5,691 (October 2008) [1]
Websitewww.synopsys.com

37°23′32″N 122°02′50″W / 37.3921°N 122.0471°W / 37.3921; -122.0471

Synopsys, Inc. NasdaqSNPS is one of the largest companies in the electronic design automation industry. Synopsys' first and best-known product is Design Compiler, a logic-synthesis tool. Synopsys offers a wide range of other products used in the design of an application-specific integrated circuit. Products include logic synthesis, behavioral synthesis, place and route, static timing analysis, formal verification, HDL (SystemC, Systemverilog/Verilog, VHDL) simulators as well as transistor-level circuit simulation. The simulators include development and debugging environments which assist in the design of the logic for chips and computer systems.

History

The company was founded in 1986 as Optimal Solutions by Dr. Aart J. de Geus and a team of engineers from General Electric's Microelectronics Center in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina. Since then it went through a series of acquisitions. The company has more than 60 sales, support and R&D offices worldwide in North America, Europe, Japan, the Pacific Rim, Israel, Chile and Armenia.

Synopsys opened its first office in India in 1995. As of 2007, Synopsys' major competitors are Cadence Design Systems, Mentor Graphics, and Magma Design Automation.

Acquisitions, mergers, spinoffs

  • 1994: Acquired Cadis, Aachen, Germany. Through this acquisition Synopsys got the communication systems and DSP design tool suit named COSSAP. COSSAP stood for Communication System Simulation and Application Processor. Synopsys carried out various communication (predominantly wireless modems) design and consulting activities using this tool (and later the evolved new tool Co-centric System Studio). The Cadis group was a spin off development initiative from Aachen Technical University (ISS) in Germany, spearheaded by Professor Heinrich Meyr[2] and Professor Gerd Ascheid.[3] COSSAP was a competing product to SPW[4] from Cadence (now maintained and enhanced by Coware).[5] Synopsys stopped support on COSSAP since 2003 and now promoting the enhanced tool Cocentric System Studio.
  • 1997: acquired EPIC Design Technology Inc., USA
  • 1997: acquired Viewlogic Systems, Inc., USA
  • June 62002: merger with Avanti Corporation, USA. Avanti was founded when several ex-Cadence employees bought the startup ArcSys. Avanti merged with ISS gaining Hercules its DRC/LVC tool, bought Compass' place and route tool; reworked it to create Saturn and Apollo II and also bought TMA which brought their pioneering TCAD and Proteus Optical proximity correction tools.[6] This was, by far, Synopsys' most significant and controversial acquisition. At the time Avanti was the #4 company in the EDA industry, and was struggling with a major lawsuit from Cadence for software theft.[7] The criminal case had just concluded, with Avanti executives pleading no contest to trade-secret theft, conspiracy to commit trade-secret theft, receiving stolen property, and securities fraud, and several receiving jail time. To acquire Avanti, Synopsys paid about $55 million in golden handshake[8] and poison pill[9] payments to these same executives. Synopsys then paid an additional $265 million to Cadence to settle the remaining civil suit and $26.1 million to Silvaco to settle two of three Silvaco's suits against Meta Software and its President filed in 1995 and inherited by Avanti [10]
  • September 122002: acquired Co-Design Automation, Inc. USA. Co-Design pioneered the Superlog language, a superset of the popular Verilog hardware description language, extending its capabilities into verification and system design. Superlog formed the basis of The SystemVerilog language standardized by Accelera in 2003.
  • March 32003: acquired Numerical Technologies, Inc. USA. (Note: a pioneer in design for manufacturing software which included CATS mask fracturing.). Synopsys paid about $250 million in cash.
  • February 232004: acquired Accelerant Networks, USA
  • February 262004: acquired technology assets of Analog Design Automation, Inc., USA
  • October 2004: acquired assets of Monterey Design Systems, Inc., USA
  • October 182004: acquired Cascade Semiconductor Solutions Inc., USA
  • November 22004: acquired Integrated Systems Engineering AG (ISE), Switzerland, a TCAD company.
  • November 22004: acquired assets of LEDA Design, Inc., USA, a developer of mixed-signal intellectual property.
  • December 12004: agreement to acquire Nassda Corp., USA, an integrated circuit simulator company and settle the litigation between the two companies
  • December 72005: Acquired HPL Technologies,[11] a semiconductor analysis software manufacturer that makes software specializing in wafer design analysis and yield enhancement for wafer process.
  • May 162006, announced expanding its presence in electronic system level (ESL) design by acquiring Virtio Corporation, creator of virtual platforms for embedded software development.
  • June 212006: Santiago Chile, Synopsys R&D Center Chile Opening.
  • August 162006: Acquired Sigma-C a Munich based lithography simulation company.[12]
  • June 182007: Acquired ArchPro Design Automation Inc.
  • July 302007: Completes Acquisition of MOSAID Semiconductor IP Assets [13]
  • October 22007: Synopsys Acquires Sandwork Design.[14]
  • March 302008: Announced acquisition of Synplicity, the leader in FPGA synthesis and rapid prototyping technology.[15]
  • December 182008: Acquired ChipIT Business Unit from ProDesign Electronic GmbH, Germany [16]

Management team

  • Dr. Aart J. de Geus, Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer
  • Dr. Chi-Foon Chan, President and Chief Operating Officer
  • Brian Beattie, Chief Financial Officer
  • Joe Logan, Senior Vice President, Worldwide Sales
  • John Chilton, Senior Vice President and General Manager, Marketing and Strategic Development
  • Jan Collinson, Senior Vice President, Human Resources and Facilities
  • Dr. Antun Domic, Senior Vice President and General Manager, Implementation Group
  • Manoj Gandhi, Senior Vice President and General Manager, Verification Group
  • Deirdre Hanford, Senior Vice President, Global Technology Services
  • Brian Cabrera, Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary
  • Paul Lo, Senior Vice President, Analog and Mixed Signal Group

Notable persons

Significant products

References