Headquarters at Santa Clara, California | |
Type | Public |
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Industry | Software & Programming |
Fate | Acquired by Synopsys |
Founded | April 1, 1997 | in Mountain View, California
Founder |
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Defunct | February 22, 2012 |
Headquarters | San Jose, California |
Key people |
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Revenue | $139.3 million United States dollar (FY 2011) |
Number of employees | 696 (1 May 2011) |
Website | www.magma-da.com |
Magma Design Automation was a software company in the electronic design automation (EDA) industry. The company was founded in 1997 and maintained headquarters in San Jose, California , with facilities throughout North America, Europe and Asia. Magma software products were used in major elements of integrated circuit design, including: synthesis, placement, routing, power management, circuit simulation, verification and analog/mixed-signal design.
Magma was acquired by Synopsys in a merger finalized February 22, 2012 at a cash value of about $523 million, or $7.35 per share.[1]
Magma was founded in 1997 by a team including Rajeev Madhavan, who was chairman, CEO and president from the company's inception.[2] The company initially competed primarily with Cadence and Avanti Corporation in physical design but eventually broadened its product portfolio and competed with all three of the largest established EDA companies: Cadence, Mentor Graphics and Synopsys.[3] Magma had a particularly strong presence in the convergence device segment through key customers such as Qualcomm, Broadcom and Texas Instruments.[4] In 2001 Roy Jewell joined Magma as chief operating officer and later that year added the title of president.[5]
Magma completed an initial public offering on Nasdaq, under the ticker symbol LAVA, on November 20, 2001[6] — the last EDA company to go public[7] — and achieved its peak annual revenue of $214.4 million in its 2008 fiscal year.[8] Magma was the fourth largest EDA company by revenue.[9]
In 2002 Magma was named to the Red Herring 100 for innovation and business strategy.[10] In 2005 Forbes ranked Magma No. 2 on its list of fastest-growing technology companies.[11]
Magma was involved in a legal dispute with Synopsys beginning in September 2004, when Synopsys sued Magma for allegedly infringing two patents.[12] Claims and counter-claims accelerated, resulting in separate court cases in California and Delaware, and a number of disputed patents. On March 29, 2007, Magma and Synopsys announced the companies had agreed to settle all pending litigation between them. As part of the settlement Magma made a $12.5 million payment to Synopsys and each company cross-licensed four previously disputed patents to the other.[13]
On November 30, 2011, Magma and Synopsys announced they had entered into a definitive agreement by which Synopsys would buy Magma for $507 million US$.[14] The merger was finalized on February 22, 2012, with cash value of the transaction at about $523 million, or $7.35 per Magma share.[15]
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magma Design Automation.
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