Broadcom Corporation

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Broadcom Corporation
Type
Subsidiary
Traded as
NASDAQ: BRCM
Industry
Semiconductors
Electronics
FateBecame a wholly owned subsidiary of Broadcom Limited after being acquired by Avago Technologies
FoundedAugust 1991; 27 years ago (1991-08)
Founders
Henry Nicholas
Henry Samueli
Headquarters
Irvine, California, United States
Key people
  • Hock E. Tan (President & CEO)

  • Henry Samueli (CTO)

  • Tom Krause (CFO)

Products
Integrated circuits
Cable converter boxes
Gigabit Ethernet
Wireless networks
Cable modems
Network switches
Digital subscriber line
Server farms
Processors
VoIP
Parent
Broadcom Inc.
(since 2016)
Websitewww.broadcom.com

Broadcom Corporation was an American fabless semiconductor company that made products for the wireless and broadband communication industry. It was acquired by Avago Technologies in 2016 and currently[update] operates as a wholly owned subsidiary of the merged entity Broadcom Inc.




Contents





  • 1 History

    • 1.1 1995-2016: Founding and name changes


    • 1.2 Qualcomm litigation and settlement


    • 1.3 2006-2008: Stock options scandal



  • 2 Products

    • 2.1 Network interface controllers


    • 2.2 Trident+ ASIC


    • 2.3 Graphics processing unit


    • 2.4 Video acceleration


    • 2.5 WiFi chipsets


    • 2.6 Vulnerabilities in SoC WiFi stack


    • 2.7 BroadVoice


    • 2.8 Linux products


    • 2.9 Raspberry Pi



  • 3 Business

    • 3.1 Notable employees


    • 3.2 Manufacturing


    • 3.3 Acquisitions


    • 3.4 Branding



  • 4 Philanthropy


  • 5 See also


  • 6 References


  • 7 External links




History



1995-2016: Founding and name changes


Broadcom Corporation was founded by professor-student pair Henry Samueli and Henry Nicholas from UCLA in 1991. In 1995 the company moved from its Westwood, Los Angeles office to Irvine, California.[1] In 1998, Broadcom became a public company on the NASDAQ exchange (ticker symbol: BRCM) and employs about 11,750 people worldwide in more than 15 countries.


Broadcom is among Gartner's Top 10 Semiconductor Vendors by revenue.[2]


Broadcom first landed on the Fortune 500 in 2009.


In 2012, Broadcom's total revenue was $8.01 billion. In 2013, Broadcom stood at No. 327 on the Fortune 500, having climbed 17 places from its 2012 ranking of No. 344.[3]


In May 28, 2015 chip maker Avago Technologies Ltd. agreed to buy Broadcom Corp. for $37 billion in cash and stock. At closing, which completed on February 1, 2016,[4] Broadcom shareholders held 32% of the new Singapore-based company to be called Broadcom Limited. Hock Tan, Avago President and CEO, was named CEO of the new combined company. Dr. Samueli became Chief Technology Officer and member of the combined company's board, and Dr. Nicholas serves in a strategic advisory role within the new company.[5][6] The new merged entity is named Broadcom Limited but inherits the ticker symbol AVGO. The BRCM ticker symbol was retired.


In May 2016 Cypress Semiconductor announced that it will acquire Broadcom Corporation's full portfolio of IoT products for $550 million. Under the deal, Cypress acquires Broadcom's IoT products and intellectual property for Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and ZigBee connectivity, as well as Broadcom's WICED platform and SDK for developers. The deal combined Broadcom's developer tools and connectivity technologies for IoT devices with Cypress' own programmable system-on-a-chip (SoC) products that provide memory, computing and graphics processing for low-power devices.[7]



Qualcomm litigation and settlement


On April 26, 2009, Broadcom settled four years of legal battles over wireless and other patents with Qualcomm Inc., another fabless semiconductor company headquartered in San Diego, California.[8] The deal ended the patent litigation as well as complaints of anti-competitive behavior before trade commissions in the United States, Europe and South Korea. As part of the settlement, Qualcomm paid $891 million in cash to Broadcom over a four-year period ending June 2013.[9]


In June 2007, the U.S. International Trade Commission blocked the import of new cell phone models based on particular Qualcomm microchips. They found that these Qualcomm microchips infringe patents owned by Broadcom.[10] In January 2017, the FTC sued Qualcomm for allegedly engaging in unlawful tactics to maintain "a monopoly on cellular-communications chips."[11]


On January 17, 2018, it was reported that the FTC was investigating whether Broadcom had "engaged in anti-competitive tactics in negotiations with customers," in a probe that had been ongoing for several months.[11]



2006-2008: Stock options scandal


On July 14, 2006, Broadcom announced it had to subtract $750 million from earnings due to stock options irregularities. On September 8, 2006, the amount was doubled to $1.5 billion. The company may also owe additional taxes.[12] On January 24, 2007, it announced a restatement of its financial results from 1998 to 2005 that totaled $2.22 billion.[13]


On May 15, 2008, Broadcom CTO Samueli resigned as chairman of the board and took a leave of absence as Chief Technology Officer after being named in a civil complaint by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).[citation needed]


On June 5, 2008, Broadcom co-founder and former CEO Henry Nicholas and former CFO William Ruehle were indicted on charges of illegal stock-option backdating. Nicholas was also indicted for violations of federal narcotics laws.[14] However, in December 2009, federal judge Cormac J. Carney threw out the options backdating charges against Nicholas and Ruehle after finding that federal prosecutors improperly tried to prevent three defense witnesses from testifying.[15]



Products




Broadcom produces the system on a chip for the line of popular Raspberry Pi single-board computers.


Broadcom's product line spans computer and telecommunication networking: the company has products for enterprise/metropolitan high-speed networks, as well as products for SOHO (small-office, home-office) networks. Products include transceiver and processor ICs for Ethernet and wireless LANs, cable modems, digital subscriber line (DSL), servers, home networking devices (router, switches, port-concentrators) and cellular phones (GSM/GPRS/EDGE/W-CDMA/LTE). It is also known for a series of high-speed encryption co-processors, offloading this processor-intensive work to a dedicated chip, thus greatly speeding up tasks that utilize encryption. This has many practical benefits for e-commerce, and PGP or GPG secure communications.


The company also produces ICs for carrier access equipment, audio/video processors for digital set-top boxes and digital video recorders, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi transceivers and RF receivers/tuners for satellite TV. Major customers include Apple, Hewlett-Packard, Motorola, IBM, Dell, Asus, Lenovo, Linksys, Logitech, Nintendo, Nokia, Nortel(Avaya), TiVo, Tenda and Cisco Systems. In September 2011, Broadcom shut down its digital TV operations.[16] Broadcom also shut down its Blu-ray chip business. The closure of these businesses began on September 19, 2011.


On June 2, 2014, Broadcom announced intentions to exit the cellular baseband business.[17]



Network interface controllers


Vendors have included Broadcom NICs in their products. For example, Dell PowerEdge M-Series blade-server products may be fitted with Dell-supplied Dual Port Broadcom NetXtreme 5709 Gigabit Ethernet port adapters.[18]



Trident+ ASIC


Another large market is hardware for switches: some vendors offer switching equipment based on Broadcom hardware and firmware (e.g. Dell PowerConnect classics) while other well-known vendors do use the Broadcom hardware but write their own firmware. The latest Broadcom Trident+ ASIC is used in many high-speed 10Gb+ switches from the largest switch-vendors such as Cisco Nexus switches running NX-OS,[19]Dell Force10 (now Dell Networking) running FTOS/DNOS,[20][21] all Arista 7050-series switches,[22] the IBM/BNT 8264, and Juniper QFX3500.[23]


The latest 'member' of the Trident family is the Trident II XGS which can support up to 32 x 40G ports or 104 x 10G ports (or a mix of both) on a single chip.[24][25] Examples of switches using this Trident II XGS chip are the Dell Networking S6000,[26] Cisco Nexus 9000[27] and some smaller vendors like: EdgeCore AS6700, Penguin Arctica 3200XL or QuantaMesh T5032[28]



Graphics processing unit


VideoCore is the GPU found on some systems-on-a-chip (SoC)s by Broadcom, the most widely known one being the BCM2835 containing VideoCore IV found in the Raspberry Pi.



Video acceleration


Broadcom Crystal HD does video acceleration.



WiFi chipsets


Broadcom "BCM43" series chips provide WiFi support in many Android and iPhone devices. Models include the BCM4339 used in phones such as the Nexus 5 (2013) and the BCM4361 used in the Samsung Galaxy S8 (2017). These are SoC devices with a Cortex R4 for processing the MAC and MLME layers and a proprietary Broadcom processor for the 802.11 physical layer.[29]
The chips also handle Wi-Fi Direct, Bluetooth and NFC.[30]


  • Broadcom supplies the WiFi+Bluetooth combo chip for Apple iPhone 3GS and later generations and corresponding iPod touch generations.

  • In Q2 2005, Broadcom Corporation announced it would be providing Nintendo its “online solution on a chip” as deployed in millions of notebooks and PDAs across the globe, enabling Nintendo 802.11b connectivity with DS and 802.11g for the Wii. More specifically, Broadcom would provide Bluetooth connectivity for Wii's controller.[citation needed]

  • In 2013 Broadcom unveiled the first 802.11ac 5G Wifi SOCs which is adopted across many mobile phones including the Samsung Galaxy S4 and S5, the HTC One and the LG Nexus 5. Additionally, routers from Motorola, Netgear, Huawei and Belkin also include Broadcom's 802.11ac chips.


Vulnerabilities in SoC WiFi stack


In April 2017, Google's Project Zero investigated Broadcom's SoC WiFi stack and found that it lacked "all basic exploit mitigations - including stack cookies, safe unlinking and access permission protection," allowing "full device takeover by Wi-Fi proximity alone, requiring no user interaction."[31] Numerous smartphones, such as by Apple, Samsung and Google were affected.[32][33][34]



BroadVoice



Broadcom authored its own VoIP codecs in 2002, and released them as open source with LGPL license in 2009:[35]



  • BroadVoice 16 with declared bitrate 16 kbit/s and audio sampling frequency 8 kHz


  • BroadVoice 32 with declared bitrate 32 kbit/s and sampling rate of 16 kHz (note however that X-Lite SIP phone's menu declares bitrate 80,000 bit/s)


Linux products


Some free and open source drivers are available and included in the Linux kernel source tree for the 802.11b/g/a/n family of wireless chips Broadcom produces.[36] Since the release of the 2.6.26 kernel some Broadcom chips have kernel support but require external firmware to be built.


In 2003 the Free Software Foundation accused Broadcom of not complying with the GNU General Public License as Broadcom distributed GPL code in a driver for its 802.11g router chipset without making that code public.


The chipset was adopted by Linksys which was later purchased by Cisco. Cisco eventually published source code for the firmware for its WRT54G wireless broadband router under the GPL-license.[37][38]


In 2012 the Linux Foundation listed Broadcom as one of the Top 10 companies contributing to the development of the Linux Kernel for 2011, placing it in the top 5 percent of an estimated 226 contributing companies. The foundation's Linux Kernel Development report also noted that, during the course of the year, Broadcom submitted 2,916 changes to the kernel.[39] In October, Broadcom released parts of the Raspberry Pi userland under a BSD-style license. According to the Raspberry Pi Foundation, this made it "the first ARM-based multimedia SoC with fully functional, vendor-provided (as opposed to partial, reverse-engineered) fully open-source drivers", although due to substantial binary firmware code which must be executing in parallel with the operating system, and which executes independently and prior to loading of the operating system, this claim has not been universally accepted.[40][41]


Broadcom provided a Linux driver for their Broadcom Crystal HD, and they also hired Eric Anholt, a former Intel employee, to work on a free and open-source graphics device driver for their VideoCore IV.



Raspberry Pi



Broadcom organizes the fabrication of the processor chip, most recently the BCM2837 chip and the wifi processor BCM43438, which is used by the charitable Raspberry Pi Foundation.[42] The foundation requested help from Broadcom making the Raspberry Pi card, a motherboard which is free of DRM or corporate control of any kind, which can interact with hardware, and which can be bought and controlled by children.[citation needed]



Business



Notable employees



  • Henry Samueli[43]


  • Gottfried Ungerboeck, inventor of trellis coded modulation

  • Henry T. Nicholas III


  • Sophie Wilson, designer of the ARM CPU instruction set


  • Eben Upton, creator of the Raspberry Pi single-board computer


Manufacturing


Broadcom is known as a fabless company. It outsources all semiconductor manufacturing to Asian merchant foundries, such as GlobalFoundries, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation, Silterra, TSMC and United Microelectronics Corporation. The company is based in Irvine, California, in the University Research Park on the University of California, Irvine campus, after a 2007 move from its previous campus near the Irvine Spectrum. It has many other research and development sites including Silicon Fen, Cambridge (UK), Bangalore and Hyderabad in India, Richmond (near Vancouver) and Markham (near Toronto) in Canada and Sophia Antipolis in France.



Acquisitions


In September 2011, Broadcom bought NetLogic Microsystems for a deal of $3.7 billion in cash, excluding around $450 million of NetLogic employee shareholdings, which will transfer to Broadcom.[44]


Besides the NetLogic Microsystems acquisition, through the years, Broadcom has acquired many smaller companies to quickly enter new markets.[45]


































































































































































































































Date
Acquired company
Amount
Expertise
January 1999
Maverick Networks
$104M in Stock
Multi-layer switches for corporate networks
April 1999
Epigram
$316M in stock

Home networking using telephone wiring, WiFi
June 1999
Armedia Inc.
$67.2M in stock
Digital Video Decoders[46]
August 1999
HotHaus Technologies
$280M in stock

DSP software for VOIP
August 1999
Altocom
$180M in stock
Software modem software
January 2000
BlueSteel Networks
$123M in stock
Security processors
March 2000
Digital Furnace Corp
$136M in stock
Data compression software
March 2000
Stellar Semiconductor
$162M in stock
3D graphics processors
June 2000

Pivotal Technologies
$242M in stock
Digital video chips
July 2000
Innovent Systems
$500M in stock
Bluetooth radios
August 2000
Puyallup Integrated Circuit Company

IC design and IC macro blocks
July 2000
Altima Communications
$533M in stock
Networking chips
October 2000
Newport Communications
$1240M in stock
10Gbit Ethernet transceivers
October 2000
Silicon Spice
$1000M in stock

DSP chips for VOIP
November 2000
Element 14
$594M in stock

DSL chipsets
November 2000
SiByte, Inc
$2060M in stock[47]MIPS, Broadband microprocessors
December 2000
Allayer Communications
$271M in stock
Enterprise and optical networking chips
January 2001
VisionTech, Ltd.
$777M in stock
MPEG-2 compression/decompression of PVRs
January 2001

ServerWorks Corp.
$1003M in stock
I/O controllers for servers and workstations
July 2001
PortaTec Corporation

Mobile devices
July 2001
Kimalink

Wireless and mobile ICs
May 2002
Mobilink Telecom, Inc.
$5.6M shares of stock
Baseband processors for cellphones
March 2003

Gadzoox
$5.8M in cash
Storage-area networks
January 2004
RAIDCore, Inc.
$16.5M in cash

RAID software
April 2004
M-Stream Inc.
$8.7M in cash and 27000 shares of stock
Technology to improve wireless reception
April 2004
Sand Video, Inc.
$77.5M in stock and $7.4M in cash
Video compression technology
April 2004

WIDCOMM, Inc.
$49M in cash
Software for Bluetooth systems
April 2004
Zyray Wireless, Inc.
$96M in stock
Baseband processors for WCDMA
September 2004

Alphamosaic, Ltd.
$123M in stock
Video processors for mobile devices
February 2005
Alliant Networks, Inc.

Cellular gateway products
March 2005
Zeevo, Inc.
$26.4M in cash and $2.6M in stock

Bluetooth headset products
July 2005
Siliquent Technologies, Inc.
$76M in cash
10Gbit Ethernet interface controllers
October 2005
Athena Semiconductors, Inc.
$21.6M in cash
Digital TV tuners and Wifi technology
January 2006
Sandburst Corporation
$75M in cash and $5M in stock
SOC chips for Ethernet packet switching
November 2006
LVL7 Systems, Inc.
$62M in cash
Networking software
May 2007
Octalica, Inc.
$31M in cash
Multimedia Over Coax technology
June 2007
Global Locate, Inc.
$146M in cash
GPS chips and software
March 2008
Sunext Design, Inc.
$48M in cash
Optical disk drive technologies
August 2008

AMD (DTV Processor Division)
$141.5M in cash (Original deal was $192.8M)[48]
Xilleon DTV processor chips, software and TV tuners
December 2009
Dune Networks[49]$178M in cash
High speed network switches
February 2010
Teknovus[50]$123M in cash
Ethernet Passive Optical Network (EPON) chipsets and software
June 2010
Innovision Research & Technology plc[51]$47.5M in cash
Near field communication expertise and IP
October 2010
Beceem Communications[52]$316M in cash
4G LTE/WiMax expertise
November 2010

Gigle Networks[53]
$75M in cash
Multimedia home networking
April 2011
Provigent Ltd.[54]$313M in cash
Microwave Backhaul
May 2011
SC Square Ltd.[55]$41.9M in cash
Israel-based security software developer
September 2011

NetLogic Microsystems
$3.7 billion
Next-generation Internet networks
March 2012

BroadLight[56]
$230M in cash
Israel-based fiber access PON developer
June 2012
Wisair
$1M in cash
Short-range Wireless data transmission
January 2013
BroadLogic

Video encoders/decoders,[57] QAM modulation and wideband receivers.
September 2013
Renesas Mobile Corporation
$164M in cash
Mobile chipset platforms (LTE-Related Assets)
2013
LSI
$6.6 billion[58]Hardware RAID manufacturer
2014
Emulex
$609 million[58]
November 2016

Brocade Communications Systems
$5.9 billion[58]
Network switch manufacturer
November 2018

CA Technologies
$19 billion


Branding


The Broadcom logo was designed by Eliot Hochberg, based on the logo for the company's previous name, Broadband Telecom. The Broadband Telecom logo was designed by co-founder Henry Nicholas' then-wife Stacey Nicholas, who was inspired by the mathematical sinc function.[citation needed]



Philanthropy


In 2009, the company founded the Broadcom Foundation as a non-profit corporation with a $50M investment, at the direction of Henry Samueli, the company's co-founder, and Broadcom Chief Executive Scott McGregor, who cited a history of science fair involvement as a factor for his own success.[59][60] McGregor was named the foundation's first president and chairman.[61][60]



See also




References




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  55. ^ [1][dead link]


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    (subscription required)



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External links


  • Broadcom homepage

  • Broadcom SEC Filings

  • 20th Century History of Broadcom corporation








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