Market reports & researches
LOG IN | Services | Contact | Custom Research



Main Technologies & Electronics Semiconductors New Semiconductors
Publications

(Currently 512486 Items)


Partners


Semiconductors / REPORT INFORMATION

New Semiconductors

DateFeb, 2002
Pages0
Price / format$2250 / Hard Copy
$2590 / PDF by E-mail

$2 250 





Abstract:

INTRODUCTION

OBJECTIVES

When Bell Labs first publicly announced the invention of what they described as a "little-bitty thing," called the transistor, in June 1948, the development was treated as an inconsequential matter by news media and the business world. The New York Times, for instance, treated the new technology not as front-page news or even a feature story, but as a tiny filler announcement buried in the back of the paper. Even the boldest visionaries of the day were scarcely aware that over the next few decades this modest device, two wires on a sliver of germanium, would revolutionize not only telephone networks and radio, but the entirety of electronics, communications, and, through the computer, information technologies as well.

As arguably the single most pivotal technological breakthrough of the second half of the twentieth century, advances in semiconductor technology have provided the essential underpinning for a still-continuing succession of commercial and technical breakthroughs. These have spanned telecommunications, radio, television, as well as mainframe, mini-, and personal computers. More recently, these breakthroughs have also included Internet-access technologies and applications, and now include next-generation high-speed broadband-access networks.

Each stage in this evolution has been driven by a process of relentless 'miniaturization,' which has come to be described by Moore's Law (named for Gordon Moore). Moore's Law states that the number of components on a silicon chip will double every 18 to 24 months. This has resulted in the constant, often volatile, reinvention of the industry, driven by exponential growth of processing speed, increase of capacity, and corresponding lowering of price per component.

The four-bit 4004 semiconductor design developed by Intel in the early 1970s, which used about 2,300 transistors, has given way to 8-, 16-, 32-, and, most recently 64-bit microprocessor architectures now running at up to 10 million or more transistors per chip. This has enabled the development of a wide variety of functional categories of semiconductors, including logic, memory, analog, and optical chips, along with integrated circuits. These are now used in a panoply of end-use devices and applications, from desktop, notebook, and handheld computers to cell phones and MP3 players.

This report will explore the historical evolution and unique structure of this still-evolving industry, with particular focus on its most rapidly growing sector, design of semiconductors for broadband-enabled devices or applications. These include DSL, cable or wireless Internet connectivity, optical networks, and multimedia applications, such as streaming audio and video. This report will also explore the industry's most recent technological and market dynamics.

REASONS FOR REPORT

The semiconductor industry has been a protean generator of new companies, technologies, and market niches since its inception four decades ago. While most industries have long since reached staid maturity by their fifth decade and are dominated by two or three major players, the semiconductor industry consists not only of giants such as Intel and Texas Instruments, but hundreds of other semiconductor device designers. Several dozen companies thus far have gotten involved in designing and developing chips that enable high-speed Internet access and applications.

This report is designed to be useful to marketers in the microprocessor and broadband access/application development community. Its goal is to help them grasp the key trends and trajectories that shape new broadband networks, and realize the growth opportunities for semiconductor vendors.

CONTRIBUTIONS

This study delineates the most critical developments in broadband enabling and enhancing semiconductors over the past several years, tracing the history of the field as well as reporting on the current state of the art. It will examine the near-term commercial opportunities and challenges of several different technologies and products that are designed to provide either broadband access or to enable broadband applications. Through the study of historic patterns as well as new and impending technological breakthroughs, forecasts are made of dominant marketing expenditure trends projected from 2001 to 2006




Table of contents:

TABLE OF CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION

  • OBJECTIVES
  • REASONS FOR REPORT
  • CONTRIBUTIONS
  • SCOPE
  • RELATED BCC PUBLICATIONS
  • BCC ON-LINE SERVICES

SUMMARY

OVERVIEW

  • DEFINITION
  • HISTORY

MICROPROCESSORS

  • LEGAL
  • CRITICAL ASSUMPTIONS

DESKTOP COMPUTERS
HOUSEHOLD INTERNET ACCESS
BUSINESS INTERNET ACCESS
WIRELESS
CABLE
DSL
SATELLITE

  • GENERAL ECONOMIC CLIMATE

WORLD TRADE CENTER ATTACKS AND AFTERMATH

BROADBAND SEMICONDUCTOR EXPENDITURES BY PRODUCT

  • SEMICONDUCTOR EXPENDITURES, 1999 TO 2006

MARKET SHARES BY PRODUCTS

  • BROADBAND MEMORY CHIP MARKET
  • LOGIC CHIP MARKET
  • ANALOG MARKET
  • OPTOELECTRONIC CHIPS
  • SPECIALIZED INTEGRATED CIRCUITRY

GLOBAL OUTLOOK

  • MEMORY CHIPS
  • LOGIC CHIPS
  • ANALOG CHIPS
  • OPTOELECTRONIC CHIPS
  • SPECIALIZED INTEGRATED CIRCUITRY

TECHNOLOGY

  • MICROPROCESSORS
  • DIGITAL SIGNAL PROCESSING (DSP)
  • FUTURE DIRECTIONS

NEXT-GENERATION LITHOGRAPHY
NEW MATERIALS
Silicon Germanium
POTENTIAL FUTURES FOR CHIPS
Quantum Computing

  • CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS

SERIALIZED PCI OVER TWISTED-PAIR CABLE
FIRST COMPLETE GIGABIT ETHERNET ADAPTER-CARD SOLUTION
FOUR HOST USB-PCI ADD-IN CARD
LUCENT ANNOUNCES HIGHEST-PERFORMANCE DSP CHIP FAMILY
FIRST DEVICE BASED ON POWER-EFFICIENT DSP CORE
BILLION BIT-PER-SECOND READ/WRITE CIRCUIT
FIRST OCTAL ADSL CHIPSET WITH SINGLE-CHIP ANALOG FRONT END
FIRST RISC-BASED PROGRAMMABLE SYSTEM ON A CHIP
10-GB ETHERNET MAC SOFT CORE
FIRST FAMILY OF MULTI-GB, SERIAL TRANSCEIVER ICS
CHIPSET TRIPLES SPEED OF HANDLING DATA IN INTERNET INTERFACE
SYSTEM-ON-CHIP (SOC) PLATFORM FOR NEXT-GENERATION INTEGRATED DATA-STORAGE ELECTRONICS
FIRST IXP 1200-BASED BUILDING BLOCK FOR TDM TO PACKET-VOICE PROCESSING APPLICATIONS
SEAMLESS PATH FROM DSP DESIGN TO IMPLEMENTATION
ENHANCED LASER CONTROL AND DESIGN FLEXIBILITY
INDUSTRY’S FIRST DAB ONE-CHIP BASEBAND PROCESSOR
FIRST 16-BIT DIFFERENTIAL OC-48 TRANSCEIVER
CHIPSET SOLUTION FOR OC-48 ATM LINE CARD APPLICATIONS
FOURTH-GENERATION ADSL CHIPSET
TRANSCEIVER LINK DELIVERS ERROR-FREE DATA OVER 20 KM

SEMICONDUCTOR COMPANY PROFILES

  • AMD
  • AMCC
  • ANALOG DEVICES
  • ANADIGICS
  • BROADCOM
  • CENTILLIUM
  • CIRRUS LOGIC
  • CONEXTANT
  • DALLAS SEMICONDUCTOR
  • DSP GROUP
  • FAIRCHILD SEMICONDUCTOR, INTL.
  • INTEGRATED DEVICE TECHNOLOGY
  • INTEL
  • INTERSIL
  • INFINEON
  • LINEAR TECHNOLOGY
  • LOGIC DEVICES
  • LSI LOGIC
  • MICRO LINEAR
  • MIPS
  • MAXIM
  • NATIONAL SEMICONDUCTOR
  • PMC-SIERRA
  • STMICROELECTRONICS
 LIST OF TABLES

 SUMMARY TABLE: BROADBAND SEMICONDUCTORS, THROUGH 2006

1 MEMORY PRODUCTS BY CATEGORY, THROUGH 2006
2 LOGIC PRODUCTS BY CATEGORY, THROUGH 2006
3 ANALOG PRODUCTS BY CATEGORY, THROUGH 2006
4 OPTOELECTRONIC PRODUCTS BY CATEGORY, THROUGH 2006
5 SPECIALIZED INTEGRATED CIRCUITS PRODUCTS BY CATEGORY, THROUGH 2006
6 BROADBAND DEVICE END MARKETS, THROUGH 2006
7 BROADBAND MEMORY CHIP MARKET AND PERCENTAGE SHARE BY VENDOR, 2000 AND 2001
8 LOGIC CHIP MARKET AND PERCENTAGE SHARE BY VENDOR, 2000 AND 2001
9 ANALOG MARKET AND PERCENTAGE SHARE BY VENDORS, 2000 AND 2001
10 OPTOELECTRONIC CHIPS MARKET AND PERCENTAGE SHARE BY VENDORS, 2000 AND 2001
11 SPECIALIZED INTEGRATED CIRCUIT MARKET AND PERCENTAGE SHARES BY VENDORS, 2000 AND 2001
12 MEMORY CHIP IMPORTS, THROUGH 2006
13 MEMORY EXPORTS, THROUGH 2006
14 LOGIC CHIP IMPORTS, THROUGH 2006
15 LOGIC EXPORTS, THROUGH 2006
16 ANALOG CHIP IMPORTS, THROUGH 2006
17 ANALOG CHIP EXPORTS, THROUGH 2006
18 OPTOELECTRONIC CHIP IMPORTS, THROUGH 2006
19 OPTOELECTRONIC CHIP EXPORTS, THROUGH 2006
20 SPECIALIZED INTEGRATED CIRCUIT IMPORTS, THROUGH 2006
21 SPECIALIZED INTEGRATED CIRCUIT EXPORTS, THROUGH 2006

 LIST OF FIGURES

 SUMMARY FIGURE: BROADBAND SEMICONDUCTORS, 1999-2006

1 MEMORY PRODUCTS BY CATEGORY, 1999-2006
2 LOGIC PRODUCTS BY CATEGORY, 1999-2006
3 ANALOG PRODUCTS BY CATEGORY, 1999-2006
4 OPTOELECTRONIC PRODUCTS BY CATEGORY, 1999-2006
5 SPECIALIZED INTEGRATED CIRCUITS PRODUCTS BY CATEGORY, 1999-2006
6 BROADBAND DEVICE END MARKETS, 1999-2006
7 BROADBAND MEMORY CHIP MARKET SHARE BY VENDOR, 2001
8 LOGIC CHIP MARKET SHARE BY VENDOR, 2001
9 ANALOG MARKET SHARE BY VENDORS, 2001
10 OPTOELECTRONIC CHIPS MARKET SHARE BY VENDORS, 2001
11 SPECIALIZED INTEGRATED CIRCUIT MARKET SHARES BY VENDORS, 2001






Order this report

  Company name:
  Contact person:
  Phone/fax:
  Email:
  Comments:
   


Product Trade Lead
0 leads found



Add New Buy/Sell Lead