Semiconductor Intellectual Property Market, By Design IP (Processor IP, Interface IP, Memory IP, and Other IP (D/A and A/D Converter)), By Revenue Source (Royalty and Licensing), By IP Core (Soft Core and Hard Core), By End User (IDMS, Foundries, OSATS, and Others), By Geography (North America, Latin America, Asia Pacific, Europe, Middle East, and Africa)
In September 2023, VeriSilicon (China) claimed that Inuitive (US), the pioneer in vision-on-chip Processor company had already adopted its dual-channel Image Signal Processor (ISP) IP, with It does this by combining high-performance vision applications such as computer vision with low-latency and low-power capabilities, into its mass-produced NU4100 vision AI processor. It brings an amazing imaging and vision experience to Robots, AugmentedReality (AR), Virtual Reality (VR), Mixed Reality (MR), Drones, and many other applications.
In May 2023, Silvaco had announced it will market, license, and support Samsung Foundry's semiconductor design IP. This innovation strengthens the current SIPware IP products and solutions from Silvaco. The initial offering is for the 14nm process node, but they are planning to extend it to advanced technology nodes at 11nm, 10nm, and 8nm. They also want to cover mature planar technologies at 28nm.
In March 2023, eMemory Technology Inc. (Taiwan) and United Microelectronics Corporation (Taiwan), one of the world's leading semiconductor foundries, announced that eMemory Technology Inc.'s Ips, a family of Resistive Random Access Memory (RRAM) offerings, has been qualified MC's 22nm ultra-low-power process, expanding UMC's comprehensive embedded memory offering for IoT and mobile applications. Both companies are also cooperating on the development of new RRAM solutions for the automotive sector.
In June 2020, Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. launched its new product 'Snapdragon 690 System-on-chip,' to support its Snapdragon 6-series processors. The Snapdragon 690 is specifically designed for 5G connectivity and supports both standalone (SA) and non-standalone (NSA) modes.