- Credence Systems
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Credence Systems Corporation Type Public Industry Semiconductor Equipment & Materials Headquarters Milpitas, CA, United States Key people Lavi A. Lev Employees 1,324[1] Website www.credence.com References: Datasource: ZenoBank[1] Credence Systems Corporation was a manufacturer of test equipment for the global semiconductor industry, with a major focus on solving specific challenges facing the fast growing consumer-driven semiconductor markets. Founded in 1978 by David Mees as Semiconductor Test Solutions, the company changed its name to Credence after acquiring Axiom and ASIX in 1990. It was publicly traded on the Nasdaq stock market under the symbol CMOS before the merger with LTX in 2008. It is headquartered in Milpitas, California, and is established in twenty countries.
Customers include integrated device manufacturers (IDMs), wafer foundries, outsource assembly and test (OSAT) suppliers and fabless chip companies.
Contents
Product Lines
Over the years Credence either produced or acquired many product lines including:
- STS6000 and STS8000 - The earliest STS test product, these purely digital automatic IC testers started as Sentry compatible clones. The programming language was lifted from the Sentry Factor standard and renamed EnFact, for ENhanced FACTor.
- AT100/STS3000/STS4000/STS5000 - These Mixed Signal (Analog and Digital) automatic IC testers were derived from the Axiom Technology AT100 located in Burlington, MA. Later this product line was renamed Domain.
- SC212 - This line was derived from the ASIX digital automated IC tester acquired from Asix Systems in California. This was one of the first testers touted as having "zero footprint", there being a test head with a only a tiny cabinet providing power and airflow instead of a large mainframe taking up test floor space.
- Vista/Duo/Quartet - This product line was derived from the Tektronix LT1000 product offering after Credence bought the Semiconductor Test Systems division from Tektronix.
- Valstar - A digital automated IC test system of up to 1024 pins. This was one of the few testers Credence made from scratch, as opposed to most of the others which were captured through acquisitions.
- Sapphire - An IC test system intended primarily for production testing with multisite capabilities, i.e., the option to test multiple chips in one go. It can be scaled to varying requirements, with a top clock rate of more than 6.4 GHz. In January 2008, Credence decided to stop developing the Sapphire platform, reduce its workforce by 35%, and close the main development site for the platform in Saint-Étienne, France (previously part of Schlumberger, then Nptest).
- Diamond - comprising two system targeted at both chip development testing and production testing, primarily for applications that are cost-sensitive.
- ASL - A product series of three distinct models. The entry model has very low environment requirements; it is unusual among ATEs in that is needs neither water nor specialized power supply. The ASL models are targeted at RF applications such as video, or wireless telecommunication chips.
Competition
On June 22, 2008 competitor LTX signed a merger agreement with Credence Systems Corporation: LTX CEO and President David Tacelli will become CEO of the merged company. [2]
On August 29, 2008 LTX and Credence Systems Corporation complete merger to form LTX-Credence Corporation (NASDAQ: LTXC). [3]
On November 18, 2010, Verigy and LTXC agreed on a merger/acquisition operation, the new company will be operated under Verigy name.
On March 27,2011 the merger agreement with Verigy was terminated as Verigy accepted a merger offer from Advantest. LTXC decided to remain a stand-alone company.
Credence System’s remaining principal competitors in the ATE business are:
- Advantest
- Teradyne
- Verigy (formerly a division of Hewlett-Packard and then Agilent Technologies)
External links
References
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