
| Type | Public |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1988 |
| Headquarters | |
| Key people | Mike Fister, President/CEO |
| Industry | Software & Programming |
| Market cap | $1.2 billion USD[1] |
| Revenue | 1.615 billion USD (2007) |
| Net income | $296 million USD (2007) |
| Employees | 5,200 (2006) [2] |
| Website | www.cadence.com |
Cadence Design Systems, Inc (NASDAQ: CDNS) is an electronic design automation (EDA) software and engineering services company, founded in 1988 by the merger of SDA Systems and ECAD, Inc. For years it had been the largest company in the EDA industry. The name is pronounced with the stress on the first syllable.
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Cadence, headquartered in San Jose, California, is a large supplier of electronic design technologies and engineering services. The primary corporate product is software used to design chips[3] and printed circuit boards[4].
Cadence employs approximately 5,200 people and reported 2006 revenues of approximately $1.48 billion. As of 2007, Cadence's major competitors are Synopsys, Mentor Graphics and Magma Design Automation.
On 15th October 2008, the top 5 executive officers of Cadence resigned, including the CEO. The company is currently being run by "the office of the CEO".[5] From May 2004 to October 2008, Michael Fister served as President and CEO of the company. Dr. John Shoven was elected Chairman of the board in July 2005. He replaced the retiring Ray Bingham.
Cadence's product offerings are targeted at various types of design and verification tasks which include:
In addition to EDA software, Cadence provides contracted methodology and design services as well as silicon design IP, and has a program to make it easier for other EDA software to interoperate with the company's tools.
Cadence, as a large public company, has been involved in a number of legal disputes. Two in particular are notable:
Cadence was involved in a long running (6 years) legal dispute[11] with Avanti Corporation, in which Cadence claimed Avant! stole Cadence code, and Avant! denied it. According to Business Week "The Avant! case is probably the most dramatic tale of white-collar crime in the history of Silicon Valley"[11]. The Avanti executives eventually pled no contest and Cadence received several hundred million dollars in restitution. Avanti was then purchased by Synopsys, which paid $265 million more to settle the remaining claims[12]. The case resulted in a number of legal precedents[13].
The Cadence group Quickturn was also involved in an unusual series of legal events with Mentor Graphics/Aptix[14]. Mentor purchased rights to an Aptix patent, then sued Cadence. In this case, the CEO of Aptix, Amr Mohsen, forged a notebook in order to make the patent case stronger. When suspicions were raised, he staged a break-in of his own car to get rid of the evidence, resulting in charges of obstruction of justice. Trying to avoid this, he attempted to flee the country, only to be caught with an illegal passport and a pile of cash. While in jail for this offense, he was recorded offering money to intimidate witnesses and kill the judge[15]. In order to fight these charges, he tried to show psychological problems, but left a trail of evidence of his research into this defense, and how it might be done. He was charged with attempting to delay a federal trial by feigning incompetency[16], and convicted anyway[17]. According to the lawyers concerned[14], the original notebooks were not needed for the trial. The patent filing date, which was not in dispute, would have sufficed.
Cadence has been involved with many mergers and acquisitions[18]. Some of the larger examples of companies merged in or acquired are: Valid Logic Systems, High Level Design (HLD), Cooper and Chyan (CCT), Quickturn, CadMOS, Simplex, Silicon Perspective, Plato, Get2Chip and Verplex Systems. The latest major activity is:
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