09 July 2007

NXP ‘sharpens’ mcu range

NXP has acquired Sharp Microelectronics’ BlueStreak range in a deal expands its 32bit microcontroller portfolio with a block of ARM7 and ARM9 based products.


Geoff Lees, general manager of NXP’s microcontroller product line, said the 32bit sector is one of the fastest growing markets at the moment. “NXP has invested a lot in growing its 32bit range in the last couple of years. BlueStreak has been one of the pacesetters in this market and we were quite surprised when Sharp said it wanted to leave the sector, so we moved quickly.”
The acquisition expands NXP’s 32bit mcu range to 50 products, but the important element is that 11 of these have lcd controllers – an area where NXP was previously weak.
Lees noted: “It’s not so much filling a hole as accelerating what we had already started. The number of tft interfaces today takes quite a lot of learning and Sharp had already made a lot of progress in developing support. The attraction is gettting an applications group with five years experience in house.”
Lees expects the transition to be relatively smooth. “One of the things that appealed is we don’t have to change our manufacturing flow,” he concluded.

Author
Graham Pitcher

Supporting Information

Websites
http://www.nxp.com

Companies
NXP Semiconductors Ltd
Sharp Microelectronics Europe

This material is protected by Findlay Media copyright
See Terms and Conditions.
One-off usage is permitted but bulk copying is not.
For multiple copies contact the sales team.

Do you have any comments about this article?

Add your comments

Name
 
Email
 
Comments
 

Your comments/feedback may be edited prior to publishing. Not all entries will be published.
Please view our Terms and Conditions before leaving a comment.

 

Related Articles

Freescale, record CoreMark

Freescale Semiconductor has announced that it has achieved the industry's ...

MIPS, Cavium collaboration

MIPS Technologies has announced that its MIPS64 architecture is powering the ...

Embedded World: ARM

ARM has announced details of the opening keynote presentation at Embedded ...

GPUs to enter mainstream

Until recently, demand for more processor performance has been met by faster ...

Serving up a new approach

It is reasonable to assume that anyone reading this article has dealings, in ...

Learning to live with digital

Moore's Law tells us that silicon manufacturing improvements give us twice the ...

Migrating ARM7 code to a Cortex-M3 mcu

This white paper by Todd Hixon from Atmel covers the differences between ARM7 ...

Batteries worldwide celebrate the arrival of ...

The explosion in use of battery operated electronics is followed by the need ...

System Verilog & OVM: Mitigating ...

This white paper from Applied Micro looks at the challenge of verification – a ...

Embedded World: ADLINK

ADLINK Technology will present amongst other products, the following highlights ...

Renesas RX210, RX630 mcus

Rutronik has added two new microcontroller families from Renesas to its ...

Automotive mcus

Toshiba Electronics Europe has announced two new automotive microcontrollers. ...

embedded world 2012

Taking place from 28 February to 1 March 2012.

Bluetooth for MCU systems

Quickly and easily add Bluetooth (and ANT) technology to systems using MSP430. ...

Concerto MCU training module

Real-time control, connectivity, and software simplicity come together in TI's ...

MSP430 5xx experimenters board

Introduction to the workshop.

Intel speeds development

ARM processors were once used primarily in mobile phones. Intel's processors, ...

Comparing apples

Gauging the power of a processor has always been an interesting process for ...

Intel and ARM set to enable future creativity

Intel has always had an interest in embedded systems, but its focus has been on ...

Aurelius Wosylus, AMD

Chris Shaw discusses AMD's latest low power processors with Aurelius Wosylus.

Ian Menzies, General Dynamics

Graham Pitcher finds out how a new network will give Welsh electronics ...

Maria Marced, President, TSMC

Innovation, technology and the right people. Graham Pitcher finds out why ...