Second source
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the electronics industry, a second source is a company that is licensed to manufacture and sell components originally designed by another company (the first source).
It used to be common for purchasers to avoid components that were only available from a single source. For simple components such as resistors and transistors, this was not usually a problem, but for complex integrated circuits, vendors often reacted by licensing one or more other companies to manufacture and sell the same parts as second sources. While the details of such licenses are usually confidential, they often involved cross-licensing, so that the original company also obtained the right to manufacture and sell parts designed by the second source.
[edit] Examples
MOS Technology licensed Rockwell and Synertek to second source the 6502 microprocessor and support components.
Intel licensed AMD to second source Intel microprocessors such as the 8086 and its related support components. This second source agreement is particularly famous for leading to much litigation between the two parties. The agreement gave AMD the rights to second source later Intel parts, but Intel refused to provide the masks for the 386 to AMD. AMD reverse engineered the 386, and Intel then claimed that AMD's license to the 386 microcode only allowed AMD to "use" the microcode but not to sell products incorporating it. The courts eventually decided in favor of AMD.