Marvell Technology Group

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Marvell Technology Group
Image:Marvell_logo.png
Type Public NASDAQ: MRVL
Founded 1995
Headquarters Santa Clara, California
Key people Sehat Sutardja, Co-founder
Weili Dai, Co-founder
Pantas Sutardja, Co-founder
Industry Semiconductors
Revenue $1.67 billion USD (2006)
Employees 3400 (2006)
Website www.marvell.com

Marvell (NASDAQ: MRVL) is an American producer of storage, communications and consumer semiconductor products. Their products can be found in a range of applications:

  • Storage: Marvell claims their products deliver the industry’s fastest data rates and lowest power requirements and enable customers to engineer high-volume products for both disk drive and network storage applications. Marvell designed the first Gigabit all-CMOS read channel, the first Gigabit-capable SOC and the first Serial ATA interface solution, enabling the Company to deliver SATA solutions to a wide variety of products and applications, from notebook and desktop PCs to enterprise-class storage systems.

Founded in 1995, Marvell has more than 3400 employees and continues to grow. Marvell has design centers in Aliso Viejo, Colorado, Maryland, San Diego and Santa Clara. Outside the US, Marvell has design centers in Germany, Israel, Japan, Singapore and Taiwan as well as numerous worldwide sales offices.

Key Marvell partners include: Alcatel, Arima, Asus, Cisco Systems, Compal, D-Link, Elitegroup Computer Systems, Ericsson, Fujitsu, Gateway, Gigabyte Technology, Hewlett Packard, Hitachi, Huawei, Intel, Inventec, LG, Linksys, Lucent Technologies, Motorola, MSI, NEC, NETGEAR, Nokia, Nortel Networks, Panasonic, Quanta Computers, Samsung, Seagate, Toshiba, VTech and Western Digital.

[edit] Purchase of Intel's XScale Business

On June 27, 2006, the sale of Intel's XScale assets was announced. Intel agreed to sell the XScale business to Marvell for an estimated $600 million in cash and the assumption of unspecified liabilities. The acquisition was completed on November 9, 2006.

[edit] Marvell vs. Free software

In October 2006, Marvell came under attention for not releasing appropriate specifications of their hardware that would make it possible for the open source community to guarantee lifetime support of Marvell's wireless devices in the One Laptop Per Child programme. Marvell's strategy was highly disapproved by Richard Stallman of Free Software Foundation and Theo de Raadt of OpenBSD. As a result of previous policies and of this very encounter, Marvell is said to be a company with an unusually poor record of supporting free operating systems. [1]

[edit] External links

In other languages