Cortina Systems

Cortina Systems, Inc. is a supplier of integrated circuits (ICs) for broadband communications founded in 2001. It is based in California.

History

Cortina Systems was founded by Amir Nayyerhabibi (who served as president and CEO) in 2001 in the Menlo Park, California library, located in Silicon Valley. It has development centers in USA, Canada, China, Taiwan, Israel.

Cortina’s product line spans computer and telecommunication networking: the company has products for core, enterprise, metropolitan high-speed networks, as well as products for the digital home networks. Products include:

  • Ethernet: 1-, 2-, and 4-port 10Gbit/s Ethernet MACs; 4-, 10-, 12-, and 24-port 1Gbit/s Ethernet MACs
  • Transport: 2.5Gbit/s, 10Gbit/s and 40Gbit/s FEC/OTN Framers; 100Gbit/s FEC/OTN/Ethernet Framer; 2.5G and 10Gbit/s VCAT framer
  • Framer: SONET/SDH POS, ATM, and GFP framer for OC-3 to OC-192 with integrated SerDes; RPR framer, RPR bridge
  • Access: 4-port EPON OLT, EPON ONU
  • PHY: 10Mbit/s transceiver; 1-, 2-, 4-, and 8-port Fast Ethernet transceivers: 6- and 8-port Fast Ethernet repeaters
  • T1/E1: 1-, 4-, and 8-port T1/E1/J1 transceivers and repeaters; OC3 transceiver
  • Digital Home Processor: Multi-core, Storage, Security

In 2006 it announced the Interlaken protocol with Cisco Systems.[1]

Manufacturing

Cortina is a fabless semiconductor company. It outsources all semiconductor manufacturing to merchant foundries. The company is based in Sunnyvale, California. It also has other research and development sites in Hsinchu (Taiwan), Ottawa (Canada), Raleigh (USA) and Shanghai (China).

Acquisitions

Cortina has acquired several companies.. In October 2014 Cortina was acquired by Inphi Corporation in October 2014, with the exception of Cortina’s Access and Digital Home business.[2]

Date Acquired Company Expertise
2004 Azanda Network Devices Traffic management and ATM Segmentation and Reassembly products[3][4]
2006 Intel Optical Networking – Component Division Ethernet Framers, Ethernet PHYs, Optical Transport FEC framers, Ethernet over SONET service framers, and T1/E1 Line Interface Units[5][6]
2007 Immenstar Passive optical networking system-on-chip technology[7]
2008 Storm Semiconductor Network processors for the home[8]
gollark: Virtual memory.
gollark: Haskell actually just preallocates a 1TB block of memory.
gollark: That sort of insanity would lead to a ton of remote code execution vulnerabilities, nobody.
gollark: ```cstatic void* LOCATION_AT_WHICH_NEXT_DATA_IS_TO_BE_STORED = 0;void* malloc(long unsigned int size) { void* laser_bees = LOCATION_AT_WHICH_NEXT_DATA_IS_TO_BE_STORED; LOCATION_AT_WHICH_NEXT_DATA_IS_TO_BE_STORED = (void*)((long unsigned int)LOCATION_AT_WHICH_NEXT_DATA_IS_TO_BE_STORED + size); return (void*)laser_bees;}```
gollark: *Especially*, say, network drivers and webapps.

References

  1. "Cisco Systems, Cortina Systems Announce Interlaken Protocol". News release. Cisco Systems Inc. April 24, 2006. Retrieved June 16, 2011.
  2. "Inphi Completes $131M Acquisition of Semiconductor Company Cortina Systems". Wall Street Journal. 2014-10-06. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 2019-05-27.
  3. "Cortina Acquires Azanda Network Devices". Converge! Network digest. February 2, 2005. Retrieved June 16, 2011.
  4. "Cortina Acquires Azanda Network Devices". Light Reading. February 2, 2005. Retrieved June 16, 2011.
  5. "Cortina Systems Purchases Intel's Optical-Networking Components Business". News release. Intel. September 11, 2006. Retrieved June 16, 2011.
  6. "Top 10 Private Companies: Cortina Systems Inc. No. 2". Light Reading. August 15, 2007. Retrieved June 16, 2011.
  7. Meghan Fuller (February 26, 2007). "Cortina Systems enters access arena with Immenstar acquisition". Lightwave online blog. Retrieved June 16, 2011.
  8. Dean Takahashi (June 18, 2008). "Cortina Systems buys Storm Semiconductor". Venture Beat blog. Retrieved June 16, 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.