Realtek

Realtek Semiconductor Corp.
Type Public company (TWSE: 2379)
Industry Semiconductor
Founded 1987
Founder(s) Po-Len Yeh
Headquarters Hsinchu, Taiwan, ROC
Products Integrated circuit semiconductor chips
Revenue $777,000,000 (2010)
Employees 1600 (2010)
Website www.realtek.com.tw

Realtek Semiconductor Corp. (Chinese: 瑞昱半導體股份有限公司), a fabless IC design house situated in the Hsinchu Science Park, Hsinchu, Taiwan, was founded in October 1987, and subsequently approved as a listed company on the Taiwan Stock Exchange in 1998. As of March 31, 2010, Realtek employs 1600 people, of which more than 700 have research and development expertise.

Contents

Products

Realtek manufactures and sells a wide variety of products throughout the world, and its product lines can be broadly categorized into two subdivisions: Communications Network ICs, and Computer Peripheral and Multimedia ICs. Included among the communications network IC products manufactured and provided by Realtek are: network interface controllers (both the traditional 10/100M Ethernet controllers and the more advanced gigabit Ethernet controllers), physical layer controllers (PHYceivers), network switch controllers, gateway controllers, wireless LAN ICs, as well as ADSL router controllers. In particular, the RTL8139 series 10/100M Fast Ethernet controllers met their height during the late 90’s, and continued to take up a significant, and eventually predominant share in the worldwide market in the following years. Those devices categorized as Realtek’s computer peripheral and multimedia IC products consist of the traditional AC'97 audio codecs, the High Definition Audio codecs, card reader controllers, clock generators, IEEE 1394 ICs, and LCD controllers.

The most notable Realtek products are 10/100M Ethernet controllers, with a global market share of 70% as of 2003, and AC'97 audio codecs, where Realtek's market share is 50%, primarily concentrated in the integrated OEM on-board audio market segment. Presently the ALC850 and RTL8139 are particular OEM favorites, offering low prices, and basic feature sets. RTL8139-based NICs are dubbed "crab cards" in Taiwan, alluding to the crab-like appearance of the Realtek logo.

It has been announced or projected, on several different occasions, that Realtek will, in the future, focus its R&D resources in the field of digital television technologies, as well as more advanced wireless communications technologies such as ultra-wide band (UWB) communications and the yet-to-be-realized 802.11n standard. It seems clear that Realtek has been setting its eye on pursuing the Holy Grail of the anticipated new applications and needs derived from the concept of Digital home proposed by Intel. The Realtek is also a main supplier of B/G/N wifi module for the US based wifi adapter manufacturer UAWIFI. The company decided to use RTL8188 board in their new high end wifi adapter UA3 as it is the most reliable and powerful adapter on the market. More information regarding newest RTL8188 chip set can be found at http://www.uawifi.com or http://www.realtek.com.tw

Reception

Awards

Realtek's single-chip fast ethernet controller, the RTL8139, receives "Best Component" and "Best of Show" awards at Computex-Taipei '97. Seven years later, its dual-band triple-mode WLAN solutions, which includes a baseband processor/media access controller RTL8185L and an RF chip RTL8255, again receive “Best Choice of Computex” award at Computex-Taipei 2004.

Criticism and praise of quality

In the kernel source code for the FreeBSD operating system, one device driver file goes as far as calling the 8139 Fast Ethernet card "probably the worst PCI ethernet controller ever made", noting that "the RealTek 8139 PCI NIC redefines the meaning of 'low end.' The 8139 supports bus-master DMA, but it has a terrible interface that nullifies any performance gains that bus-master DMA usually offers."[1]

On the other hand, OpenBSD developer Theo de Raadt has praised Realtek, saying "the (newish) Realtek Gigabit Ethernet chips are not too bad at all, and there's lots of documentation. So maybe the Taiwanese products are a little bit later to the market, but they are simpler and robust once they do make it to the market."[2]

Security breach

According to the comprehensive analysis of Stuxnet virus released by Symantec in 2011[3], a Realtek's digital certificate for Windows got compromised, then revoked by Verisign : "The attackers would have needed to obtain the digital certificates from someone who may have physically entered the premises of the two companies [Realtek and JMicron] and stole them, as the two companies are in close physical proximity." states the report.

See also

References

External links