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Mentor Graphics

Coordinates: 45°19′10″N 122°45′46″W / 45.31944°N 122.76278°W / 45.31944; -122.76278
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 82.75.104.60 (talk) at 16:12, 17 March 2018 (Mentor has discontinued EDGE Developer Suite after deprecating it around 2011 in favor of Sourcery CodeBench.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Mentor Graphics
Company typeSubsidiary of Siemens
IndustryEDA, Embedded Software
Founded1981
FounderTom Bruggere Edit this on Wikidata
HeadquartersWilsonville, Oregon,
United States
45°19′10″N 122°45′46″W / 45.31944°N 122.76278°W / 45.31944; -122.76278
ProductsNucleus OS, Sourcery CodeBench, ModelSim/QuestaSim, Calibre
RevenueIncrease$1.28B USD (2017)[1]
Increase$155 million USD (2017)[1]
Total assets
  • Increase US$ 1.745284 billion (2013) [2]
  • Increase US$ 1.550675 billion (2012) [3]
Number of employees
5,968 (2017)[4]
ParentSiemens
Websitementor.com

Mentor Graphics, Inc was a US-based electronic design automation (EDA) multinational corporation for electrical engineering and electronics.

The company was founded in 1981 and sold to Siemens in 2017.

History

Mentor Graphics was founded in 1981 by Tom Bruggere, Gerry Langeler and Dave Moffenbeier. The first round of money, worth $1 million, came from Sutter Hill, Greylock, and Venrock Associates. The next round was $2 million from five venture capital firms, and in April 1983 a third round raised $7 million more. Mentor Graphics was one of the first companies to attract venture capital to Oregon.[citation needed]

Apollo Computer workstations were chosen as the initial hardware platform. Based in Chelmsford, Apollo was less than a year old and had only announced itself to the public a few weeks prior to when the founders of Mentor Graphics began their initial meetings.

When Mentor entered the CAE market the company had two technical differentiators: the first was the software - Mentor, Valid, and Daisy each had software with different strengths and weaknesses. The second, was the hardware - Mentor ran all programs on the Apollo workstation, while Daisy and Valid each built their own hardware. By the late 1980s, all EDA companies abandoned proprietary hardware in favor of workstations manufactured by companies such as Apollo and Sun Microsystems.

After a frenzied development, the IDEA 1000 product was introduced at the 1982 Design Automation Conference, though in a suite and not on the floor.[5]

In June 2008, Cadence Design Systems offered to acquire Mentor Graphics in a leveraged buyout. On 15 August 2008, Cadence withdrew this offer quoting an inability to raise the necessary capital and the unwillingness of Mentor Graphics' Board and management to discuss the offer.[6] Mentor acquired Flomerics Group plc for $60 million in cash in October 2008, and in August 2009, Mentor completed the acquisition of silicon manufacturing testing company LogicVision for $13 million in an all-stock deal.[7] Mentor completed the acquisition of Valor Computerized Systems in March 2010 in a cash and stock deal valued at $50 million.[8]

On 22 February 2011, Carl Icahn, an activist investor, made an offer to buy the company for about $1.86 billion in cash.

As of 2012, Mentor's major competitors are: Cadence Design Systems, Synopsys, Altium, and Zuken.

On March 3, 2015 Mentor Graphics announced it had acquired the business assets of Tanner EDA.[9]

On 14 November 2016, Mentor Graphics announced that it was to be acquired by Siemens for $4.5 billion, at $37.25 per share, a 21% premium on Mentor's closing price on the previous Friday.[10] The acquisition was completed in March 2017.[11]

Locations

Mentor Graphics product development takes place in the USA, Poland, Hungary, Japan, Pakistan, India, Egypt and Armenia.

Notable persons

James "Jim" Ready, left Mentor in 1999 to form the embedded Linux company MontaVista. Neil Henderson joined Mentor Graphics in 2002 with the acquisition of Accelerated Technology Inc. Stephen Mellor, a leader in the UML space and co-originator of the Shlaer-Mellor design methodology, joined Mentor Graphics in 2004 following the acquisition of Project Technology.

Management

Walden C. Rhines is the company's chief executive officer and president[12] following the acquisition by Siemens.

Products

Entrance to former company headquarters

Mentor Graphics distributes the following tools:

  • Electronic design automation for:
  • Embedded systems Development:
    • Mentor Embedded Linux[13] for ARM, MIPS, Power, and x86 architecture processors
    • Real-time operating systems:
      • Nucleus OS (acquired in 2002 when Mentor acquired Accelerated Technology, Inc.)
      • VRTX (acquired in 1995 when Mentor bought Microtec Research)
    • AUTOSAR implementation:
      • Embedded implementation VSTAR in part acquired from Mecel in 2013[14]
      • Configuration tooling Volcano Vehicle Systems Builder (VSB)
    • Development Tools:
      • Sourcery CodeBench and Sourcery GNU toolchains (acquired in 2010 when Mentor acquired CodeSourcery)
      • Inflexion UI - (Next Device was acquired by Mentor in 2006)
      • xtUML Design Tools: BridgePoint (acquired in 2004 when Mentor acquired Project Technology)
    • VPN Solutions:
      • Nucleus Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (PPTP) software
      • Nucleus NET networking stack
      • Nucleus implementation of the Microsoft Point-to-Point Encryption (MPPE) protocol
      • Nucleus PPP software
  • FPGA synthesis tools:
  • Electrical Systems, Cabling and Harness design:
    • Capital - a suite of integrated tools for the design, validation and manufacture of electrical systems and harnesses
    • VeSys - a mid-market toolset for vehicle electrical system and harness design
  • Simulation tools for analog mixed-signal design:
    • ModelSim is a hardware simulation and debug environment primarily targeted at smaller ASIC and FPGA design
    • QuestaSim is a Simulator with additional Debug capabilities targeted at complex FPGA's and SoC's. QuestaSim can be used by users who have experience with ModelSim as it shares most of the common debug features and capabilities. One of the main differences between QuestaSim and Modelsim (besides performance/capacity) is that QuestaSim is the simulation engine for the Questa Platform which includes integration of Verification Management, Formal based technologies, Questa Verification IP, Low Power Simulation and Accelerated Coverage Closure technologies. QuestaSim natively supports SystemVerilog for Testbench, UPF, UCIS, OVM/UVM where ModelSim does not.
    • Eldo is a SPICE simulator
    • SystemVision is a virtual lab for mechatronic system design and analysis
    • ADiT is a Fast-SPICE simulator
    • Questa ADMS is a mixed-signal verification tool
  • Mechanical Analysis Division (formed from the acquisition of Flomerics in 2008):
    • Fluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer tools:
      • FloTHERM is a Computational Fluid Dynamics tool dedicated to electronics cooling using parameterized ‘SmartParts’ for common electronic components such as fans, heatsinks, and IC packages
      • FloTHERM XT is a electronics cooling CFD tool incorporating a solid modeler for manipulating MCAD parts.
      • FloEFD is a ‘design concurrent’ CFD tool for use in early-stage product design and is embedded within MCAD systems such as Solidworks, Creo Elements/Pro, CATIA V5 and Siemens NX
    • Thermal Characterization and Thermal Interface Material (TIM) Measurement equipment:
      • T3Ster is a hardware product that embodies an implementation of the JEDEC JESD51-1 standard for IC package thermal characterization and is compliant with JESD51-14 for Rth-JC measurement
      • TeraLED provides automation of the CIE 127:2007 standard providing total flux, chromaticity and correlated color temperature (CCT) for power LEDs. With T3Ster it provides thermal resistance metrics for LEDs based on the real dissipated heating power.
      • DynTIM extends T3Ster, providing a dynamic thermal test station for thermal conductivity measurements of thermal interface materials (TIMs), thermal greases and gap pads.
    • FloMASTER is a 1D or system-level CFD solution for analyzing fluid mechanics in complex pipe flow systems (from the acquisition of Flowmaster Ltd in 2012).
    • CADRA Design Drafting is a 2-1/2D mechanical drafting and documentation package specifically designed for drafting professionals. It provides the tools needed to develop complex drawings quickly and easily (from the acquisition of the CADRA product in 2013).

The Veloce product family enables SoC emulation and transaction-based acceleration.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Mentor Graphics Reports Fiscal Fourth Quarter Results" (PDF). Retrieved 2018-01-22.
  2. ^ "MENTOR GRAPHICS CORP 2013 Q3 Quarterly Report Form (10-Q)" (XBRL). United States Securities and Exchange Commission. December 4, 2013.
  3. ^ "MENTOR GRAPHICS CORP 2012 Annual Report Form (10-K)" (XBRL). United States Securities and Exchange Commission. March 15, 2013.
  4. ^ "MENTOR GRAPHICS CORP 2017 Form 10-K". Retrieved 2018-01-22.
  5. ^ The Mentor Graphics Story copyright 1988 Mentor Graphics Corporation
  6. ^ "Cadence Withdraws". Retrieved 2008-09-18.
  7. ^ "Mentor now owns LogicVision". Portland Business Journal. August 18, 2009. Retrieved 2009-08-22.
  8. ^ "Mentor Graphics Acquires Valor Computerized Systems, Ltd".
  9. ^ "Mentor Graphics Acquires Tanner EDA". Retrieved 2017-09-08.
  10. ^ "Siemens to expand its digital industrial leadership with acquisition of Mentor Graphics". www.mentor.com. Retrieved 2016-11-14.
  11. ^ Rogoway, Mike. "Siemens completes $4.5 billion purchase of Mentor Graphics". The Oregonian/OregonLive. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  12. ^ "Executive Team". www.mentor.com. Retrieved 2018-01-22.
  13. ^ "Mentor Embedded Linux Development Platform". www.mentor.com. Retrieved 2016-09-19.
  14. ^ "Mentor Graphics acquires Mecel Picea AUTOSAR Development Suite". www.mentor.com. Retrieved 2016-09-01.