Generated by GPT-5-mini| IDT (Integrated Device Technology) | |
|---|---|
| Name | Integrated Device Technology |
| Type | Public |
| Founded | 1980 |
| Founder | Manny B. Gordon; Scott A. Phillips; Fredrick J. Haswell |
| Headquarters | San Jose, California |
| Key people | Gregory S. Waters; N. Janakiraman |
| Industry | Semiconductors |
| Products | Integrated circuits, timing products, power management, sensors |
IDT (Integrated Device Technology) is a semiconductor company specializing in mixed-signal and radio-frequency integrated circuits for communications, computing, and consumer electronics. The company developed timing, memory interface, power management, and sensor products used by major original equipment manufacturers and systems integrators. IDT's technologies supported networking, storage, wireless infrastructure, automotive, and industrial markets.
IDT was founded in 1980 in San Jose amid the rise of Silicon Valley firms such as Intel, AMD, Fairchild Semiconductor, National Semiconductor, and Texas Instruments. Early milestones intersected with product cycles at IBM and Hewlett-Packard and paralleled developments by Xilinx, Linear Technology, Analog Devices, and Maxim Integrated. During the 1990s IDT expanded in parallel with the telecom boom involving Lucent, Nortel, Alcatel-Lucent, and Ericsson, and later navigated the dot-com contraction that affected peers like Sun Microsystems and Cisco Systems. In the 2000s IDT shifted toward timing and mixed-signal integration, contemporaneous with moves by Broadcom, Marvell, Qualcomm, and BroadRiver. Leadership changes mirrored governance patterns seen at Applied Materials, Micron, STMicroelectronics, and NXP. IDT's corporate trajectory included public offerings and strategic transactions similar to those of Synopsys, Cadence, and Mentor Graphics.
IDT produced timing semiconductors analogous to offerings from SiTime, Microchip, Analog Devices, Silicon Labs, and Renesas. Its timing portfolio addressed synchronous designs found in platforms from Dell, HPE, Lenovo, Apple, and Microsoft. IDT's memory interface PHYs and buffers competed with products by SK hynix, Samsung, Micron, and Hynix. Power management ICs targeted applications similar to those served by Infineon, STMicroelectronics, Texas Instruments, and ON Semiconductor. RF front-end and wireless sensor ICs aligned with roadmaps by Qualcomm, Broadcom, Nvidia, Marvell, and Intel. IDT also offered packet timing and synchronization solutions relevant to Cisco Systems, Juniper Networks, Arista Networks, and Ciena deployments. The company provided custom ASIC services and turnkey modules analogous to work from Lattice Semiconductor and Microsemi.
IDT served customers across cloud infrastructure operators such as Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and Meta Platforms; enterprise networking firms including Cisco Systems, Juniper Networks, and Arista Networks; storage OEMs like NetApp and Seagate; consumer electronics makers including Sony, Samsung, LG, and Panasonic; and automotive suppliers analogous to Bosch, ZF, Magneti Marelli, and Denso. Industrial automation clients paralleled relationships with Siemens, ABB, Honeywell, and Rockwell Automation. Telecom infrastructure engagements reflected work with Ericsson, Nokia, Huawei, and ZTE. Defense and aerospace integrations followed patterns seen at Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and Northrop Grumman.
IDT's manufacturing strategy included wafer fabrication partnerships and assembly/test arrangements similar to those used by TSMC, GlobalFoundries, UMC, SMIC, and Tower Semiconductor. Packaging and substrate sourcing paralleled suppliers such as Amkor, ASE, and SPIL. Test and qualification practices reflected standards applied at UL, IEEE, JEDEC, and ISO-certified facilities. R&D and regional offices were located in technology hubs comparable to San Jose, Santa Clara, Austin, Cambridge, Hsinchu, and Bangalore, interacting with local ecosystems around Stanford University, MIT, UC Berkeley, Tsinghua University, and IISc.
As a publicly traded entity, IDT's financial reporting paralleled practices of companies listed on NASDAQ and aligned with standards from SEC filings, FASB rules, and GAAP. Corporate governance echoed models used by Apple Inc., Intel Corporation, NVIDIA, and AMD including board committees, executive compensation, and shareholder relations common to firms like Broadcom and Qualcomm. Capital markets interactions involved relationships with investment banks and institutional investors such as Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, and Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Treasury and M&A activities paralleled transactions seen at Analog Devices, Maxim Integrated, and Linear Technology.
R&D at IDT focused on timing accuracy, jitter reduction, mixed-signal integration, and low-power design, topics also central to research groups at IEEE, ACM, DARPA, IETF, and standards bodies like ITU. Collaboration and patenting strategies resembled those of Qualcomm, Broadcom, Intel, and Texas Instruments. University partnerships and consortia mirrored connections with Stanford University, MIT, UC Berkeley, Carnegie Mellon, and Caltech. IDT's engineering teams used electronic design automation tools from Synopsys, Cadence, and Mentor and collaborated with packaging research at institutions like IMEC and Fraunhofer.
IDT pursued acquisitions and alliances in patterns similar to consolidation activity by Analog Devices, NXP and Maxim Integrated. Notable peer transactions in the sector included deals involving Linear Technology, Maxim Integrated, Analog Devices, Marvell, and Broadcom that shaped market consolidation. Strategic partnerships involved foundries such as TSMC and GlobalFoundries, test houses like Advantest, and channel partnerships with distributors like Arrow, Avnet, and Digi-Key. Collaborative projects referenced standards and alliances including JEDEC, OSP, Open Compute Project, and TIA.