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PREMIUM

Angels better than VCs?

Recent Volatility

Kerry & Snowe rejuvenate the US SBIC program

Benchmark Capital creates Balderton Capital

China venture capital grew 55 percent in 2006

ETF closes $70m in first European cleantech fund

New £25m early stage venture fund launched along with ‘IQ Angel’ sector experts

Pond Ventures: a VC fund with a live technology pulse

Scotland’s Braveheart plans AIM flotation amid nervous market

Seraphim Capital, an angel-led fund with a mission

Chilli Profile: Quotient Diagnostics

INSIDE Contactless recapitalizes with new round of $25m

Applied Materials purchase of HCT Shaping Systems SA

ARC’s acquistion of Tenison EDA: a real Bargain

Giddy steps down from Amino

Mobile multimedia

MPEG4 rising fast

Sweet vengeance for Transmeta as Intel forks out $250m

CEVA DSPs shipping to 80 percent of handset OEMs

Sony Ericsson ASP drops but volume grows 59%

Tenison EDA acquisition by ARC

China to adopt single corporate rate tax for both domestic and foreign entities, and property rights law

Automotive semiconductor firm ELMOS raises sales and net income

Trade Commission’s final decision in Rambus ‘standard setting’ case

CEVA cost-cutting drive for profitability impacts first half revenue growth

US angel networks go through a renaissance

Ignios’ final curtain: lessons learned

Can start-ups compete directly with the giant gorillas?

Broadband Market Statistics

OECD Inflation Data

Europe revives optics

Cellular modems on rise

MIDs boost mobile data

Future market for PNDs

Multi-standard DTV

Digital asset opps

Nokia lowers outlook

AM-OLED debate

Mobile phones saturation

Decline in RF for 3G

Enhanced mobile HSPA

3G iPhone teardown

Solar cell parity

'Flirting with Europeans'

HSPA mobile broadband deal

GPS to hit $1bn

Downturn in all economies

Wireless semis surpass overall chips

Optoelectronics growth

Photovoltaic silicon shortage

Q108 mobile handset top five

LTE launch raises competition for WiMAX

Toshiba Exits HD-DVD

WiMAX Roll Out

LEDs drive lighting

Blade server shipments

2008 smart card mkt

LEDs and Traditional Lighting

Nintendo displaces Sony

Maps Key Part of GPS

WiFi Radio

LCD-TV revenue to reach $7.4 billion in 2011

PC Market

Microcontrollers growth: Renesas takes lion share

Optics market boost with Ericsson high capacity IPTV

OLED shipments will make a small mark in TV market

Electronic shelf display (ESL) to lead small display market

OECD broadband subscribers to hit 200 million

Content drives up mobile phone ARPU as voice declines

PMP/MP3 player is fastest growing market in consumer electronics

Is there a future for DAB, DVB-H, mobile TV in automotive infotainment?

Pay-TV, IPTV to drive premium video services market to exceed $277 billion by 2010

Freescale Semiconductor leads in $18bn automotive IC market

How much do the components cost in an iPhone?

How much do the components cost in an iPhone?

Will Europe feature in the top fabless list?

India’s chip design industry set to nearly quadruple by 2010

PlayStation 3 offers supercomputer performance at PC pricing

Smartphone sales rising fast

Quanta and Asustek lead ODM chip spending in 2006

iPod Nano teardown reveals much reduced BoM over earlier versions

Koreans take the lead over China in global television market

LED future bright despite 2005 slowdown

Clock generation market to double in five years

Broadband/Internet potentially the most disruptive market for video-on-demand (VoD)

IPTV subscriber base set for explosive growth

Temperature sensor ICs growing again

Blood pressure monitoring and tyre pressure sensors market to double

Is Toshiba taking loss on HD-DVD shipments?

China’s top 10 IC design companies - opportunities for HTSUs

New thermal IC products - ‘cool’ solutions

key trends in the Indian telecom industry

iPod and cell phones intensify market for OLED displays

Real world signal management drives $50 billion mixed-signal market

The big semiconductor company’s dilemma

Promising science: magnetic logic

China-India GDP

Indian Bio startup support

Indian Economy in 2008

Chinese EMV market

Nanotech challenges

Ericsson Deal With Idea Cellular

Rural Internet Pilot

China 3G license incentives

China GPS chipsets

India $6.59bn Consumer Electronics

Indian Telecom $4.5bn capex spend

Early Stage fund marriages

London acquires Yorkshire

Increased MEA M&A

US IPO rebounds

Europe IPO/M&A slows

Motorola’s acquisition of TTPCom will unnerve IP market

Rajeev Madhavan

Capital Markets Turbulence

Packet Switched Networks

Draft Executive Order

SBIR 20th year

3i Quits Venture Capital

IMEC Taiwan benefits start-ups

Should VC-backed companies be entitled to government grants?

Small Firms' Research

PREMIUM

Narayan Murthy, Infosys founder, speaks in London

Women entreps think tank gets £540k

BERR changes

Investment in natural speech for games

Awards reach Europe VCs

Mobile-based social network targets India

Schroder heads Arma USA

3i expert joins Wellington

Banks & small business

Motorola's deal for Jha

EDA test firm's £750k

DN Capital opens in US

SWRDA fastTrack2

Young Apprentice winner

Miracor receives €6 million

New ETF team member from Goldman Sachs

NTRglobal receives €22m

Glover review - SME feedback wanted

North-West technology network kicks off

Electronic nose tech

Enterprising Britian finalists

$4.5m for ChipVision

Ericsson reverse stock split

Schools' design challenge

$8m for travel web site

Review site funding and French portal

Selective public procurement for SMEs/HTSUs

Silicon Valley Boomer Business Competition

Firms go online to choose licensable tech

Techno gadgets burning out Brits

Serial Web entrepreneur now at Wellington Partners

More female entrepreneurs wanted

HuaXun 'sea turtles' and CEVA deliver software GPS

$10m for in-building wireless tech

$220m clean tech fund closes

5th exit for The Capital Fund

Flight search engine's new chairman

lastminute team gets second Spark

Mobius acquires Harvard technology license

SMS innovator secures £450k

FirstCapital assists Multimap in $50m buyout

Toumaz adds Australian patent

Virtual awards for mobile content

Fibre to Premises & WiFi gets boost

France stock options

Mi-Pay receives £1.8m

New VC for early stage tech

2008 tech growth despite gloom

NMI honours Ian Burnett

Scottish university projects get £3.3M

Pulsic board appoints EDA veteran

£600k for optical imaging

Join trade mission to India

London Technology Fund makes first exit

CamSemi eastern drive

ETT call for web start-ups d/l 30 Sep

XMOS raises $16m

No 9 to 5 for entreps

Belgacom satellite business acquired

Inxstor gets £600k funding

O2 entrepreneur of the year

OnRelay funding lead by IQ Capital

goSupermodel: dot bomb v2.0?

Nanotech innovator raises £225k for LEDs

Vicky Pryce appointed to Government Economic Service

Archives..

UKFI and early stage funds

A real-life dragons den, not reality TV

Co-founders' £44m cash jackpot

Intelligent mannequins

£80m R&D tax credit boost

Nokia/Qualcomm patent

Bill Gates retires, but..

Biofuels debate

UK VC capital in decline

Can EIS survive?

VCs follow new global innovation

UK's hidden innovators

Doing it in style in China

Bill Gates House Science Cttee speech

UK budget 08

A new UK talent strategy and SMEs

New Scottish can do spirit

New BERR team

Pesistence through volatile markets

HTSU's caught up in private equity crossfire

UK entreps' poor self-confidence

Goodbye DTI: game, set and ‘DIUS’

Indian KPO is the real threat to European high-tech, not BPO

Budget ’07: you have read the headlines - now read the analysis for high-tech start-ups

Independence for Technology Strategy Board (TSB)

UK businesses ignoring world’s fast growing economies are signing their death warrants

Check against delivery: Brown's Speech, Bangalore, India

Why do early stage investors stay glued to their domestic markets?

More editorials..

Antenova gets $10 million investment

Artimi raises $26.5 million in series B (R2) funding

Mirics: a fabless start-up with a clear vision

DiBcom

picoChip secures new VC fans and $20.5 million R3 funding

Esmertec IPO postponed

Smartdot

More Due Diligence..

£4m alternative funds for West Midlands

£300k investment in Bluetooth/Wi-Fi start-up

Semi investments drop 44%

Irish fabless bucks trend, secures $14m in R1

Israeli $2.3m VC funding

Intel leads solar €85m

MergeOptics rares towards IPO

CamSemi investments now total $30.5m

Scottish £1.3m grant to IC firm

No Israeli credit crunch

Cleantech investment peaks

Fuel cell tech funding

$14m for mobile voice apps

European VCs smell billion dollar exits

Use PE capital for overlooked markets

High-tech investors'optimism for 2008

Ex CSR VP leverages £1.2m in Camrivox

BoS pitches in with Oxford Angels

BoS pitches in with Oxford Angels

Israeli VCs hit six-year record

Oxford Capital ‘tees off’ with new venture

Braveheart maiden results

Israeli investments to hit record $1.7bn

New ECF candidates Q407

Q307 Euro VC trends

Earlybird VC exit award

US angel trends 1H07

VCT honeymoon over

US VC deals

First half Israeli VC rises by 10% to hit $842 million

E-Synergy to manage new Emerald Fund for university research projects

European Q1 VC flat at €1.07 billion

Venture-backed M&A/IPO levels back to 2000 level

More investor trends..

Ericsson mobile moves in Africa

Low cost photonics silicon prototyping

California complacency

Renewables report: can UK meet target?

World’s first 60GHz HD wireless chip is developed

Case report: patents/software in England

£2m funding drives microfluidics tech

70m PC buyers want mobile broadband

iPhone revenue sharing

GSMA to study mass market potential of embedded mobile broadband

UK patents: top 10 consolidates

Major company law overhaul

Durham Scientific Crystals

UK R&D

Differentiating between corporate spin-outs/carve outs/corporate venturing

VC investment slows in Q2 2005

First half Israeli high-tech venture capital rises by 15%

The US SBIR and its relevance to the UK

UK technology VC investments fall by 17% in 2004

EMV (chip + PIN): show us the money?

Digital cinema gets a kick-start

More markets..

Motivational and educational

Objective and not condescending dragon

Academics must blame themselves if they don’t patent

SFLG: independent ombudsman

SFLG sympathy: Bank managers are clueless

More right 2 reply..

Dialogue - Rajeev Madhavan

Gregory K. Hinckley

Robin Saxby

Walden Rhines

Simon Davidmann

Candace Johnson

David Srodzinski

SiGe pioneer joins semiconductor start-up

Richard Farleigh

Simon Davidmann

Gary Kildall

Walter Herriot

John Laurie

Amaratunga, CamSemi

More...

Outsourcing tips

R&D tax credits debate

Call for papers - VLSI2009

Lost years for UK innovation

Hard times, position your company for downturn

Green myths about corn ethanol

British Business Angels Association (BBAA) welcomes support for investment in early stage businesses

English Court Position on Computer Programs and Business Methods

The changing environment for life science funding

Patent, publish or perish?

More speakers corner..

Acuid in administration

MBO blues, part two

MBO blues, part one

Destructive acquisitions

The road to CEO hell

Doug Richard's downturn survival tips

Investing worst practices

To patent or not patent – that is the question

Roll up for the 3GSM Congress

Understanding key venture finance terms

The global patent

Trademarks

Steve Jobs

Investor presentations

Law firm pioneers fixed legal fees for investment solution

Top start-up tips from Mike Baker

More trade secrets..

Accountants are tech-savvy

Entrep and angel reunited at Venturefest v8

Intelligent Mechanized Mannequins

Auto PR generator

Schoolmaster claims credit for entrepreneurship programmes

Mirror TV

About Uncle Thakur

10 - the prospect, the channel

9 - Partnering

8 - Product development

7 - Stock options

6 - Building the team

5 - The term sheet

4 - Pinning down the plan

3 - Seeds of excess

2 - Dinner brainstorm

1 - Drive-by-IPO


High-tech

Media

Chilli Domain Definitions™

Chilli Value Test™

Chilli Startup Definitions™

SAMBiDS defined


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High-tech

Due Diligence: Pulsic


By The Chilli analysts

Introduction

Pulsic is a post Chilli R3 EDA (electronic design automation) software vendor, founded late 1999. The company currently has fully functional products shipping to customers, and is generating measurable revenue from its customer base.

Pulsic's heritage actually dates back before 1999. During the 1980s, Racal-Redac was involved in the development of software technology for the design of PCBs (printed circuit boards). The company's researchers noticed that PCBs were getting simpler, as the complexity was moving onto the ICs (integrated circuits) as Moore's law was allowing more transistors, and hence functionality, to be integrated. The company initiated a research and development programme to look into techniques for place and route (the placement and interconnection of blocks of logic).

Racal-Redac's was acquired by Zuken of Japan in 1994 and Zuken continued the research, using the technology for its products targeted at PCB development. Zuken developed the technology for IC development, creating the Rexsir product for the Japanese market (packaging it with analogue IC design tools from Seiko Instruments). At this point, the development team wanted to aggressively apply the technology to IC design, whereas Zuken was focused on PCB development. Zuken licensed the technology to EDA vendor Chip & Chip, which then changed focus, allowing the Pulsic team to license the IC technology.

Vital statistics

Value proposition

The Chilli perspective

 

Vital statistics

The company was founded by Mark Williams (COO), Jeremy Birch (CTO), Fumiaki Sato (VP of business development) and Mark Waller (VP of R & D), all formerly from Zuken, apart from Birch, who joined from ST Microelectronics. Ken Roberts (former VP and general manager for Magma Europe) was appointed CEO in 2003.

Seed funding of $300k was provided by William (Wai-Yan) Ho, a founder of several EDA startups including Chip & Chip (acquired by Aspec Technology) and Archer Systems (acquired by Epic and ultimately Synopsys). The founders bootstrapped the company by investing sweat equity and relying on the cheapest form of funding, namely customer revenues from an OEM relationship with Seiko for the first three years.

Pulsic received €5.3m of R3 funding from Prime Technology Ventures and Index Ventures to expand and strengthen sales and marketing channels. Roberts expects Pulsic to breakeven during Q2 2004.

Headcount is currently 15, with 12 staff involved in development and customer support. Pulsic has two offices, in Bristol and Tokyo. The company is in the process of appointing reps in Korea, Israel and the USA. Roberts aims to have reps in key geographies, backed up by a Pulsic employee to ensure share of mind and demonstrate commitment.

Blue chip customers include Elpida (ex NEC and Hitachi commodity memory divisions), Fujitsu, Renesas (Mitsubishi and Hitachi semiconductor divisions) and Sony. At the time Pulsic was created out of Zuken, the company had 8-10 customers with no tapeouts at that point. By June 2002, the company estimated 100 tapeouts with 20 customers and 30 product licenses. The company currently has 28 customers, 51 licenses in production use and well over 110 tapeouts.

Value proposition

The design of complex ICs requires the use of EDA (electronic design automation) tools. Designs are done at a high-level of abstraction, to ease design productivity. The high-level design is eventually translated into a physical description of millions of transistors and their interconnection, which is then imprinted on masks, which are used for manufacturing semiconductors at silicon foundries.

The placement and interconnection (routing) of blocks of logic circuits affects their performance, in terms of speed, power, size (of overall IC) and susceptibility to interference, impacting cost and reliability. This is not as critical in digital IC design as it is in analogue and mixed-signal (analogue and digital circuitry on the same design) IC design, where the exact value of a signal is critical, in contrast to digital signals, which are either on or off.

There are different approaches to IC routing - grid-based, graph-based and shape-based. Their suitability is determined in part by the kind of circuitry (digital, analogue, mixed-signal) to be routed, as well as by the constraints, e.g. timing, added to the routing operation. Analogue and mixed-signal routing requires additional constraints in terms of signal integrity, crosstalk, etc.

Grid routers work by superimposing a mesh-like template over the area to be routed, where evenly spaced horizontal and vertical tracks form a grid. The major disadvantage of a grid-based router is that not everything can be resolved to a grid, and they are not good at handling signal-integrity issues. A shape based router works without a grid, and can therefore work with complex geometries and get a higher routing density. A shape-based router can handle complex requirements such as differential pair routing, shielding, bus interleaving, 45-degree routing, etc. This makes them ideal for analogue and mixed-signal design.

Shape-based routers have traditionally had problems handling large data sizes, making them suitable only for small designs. Pulsic has overcome this with an approach known as 'T-shape', which is a data representation for storing routing information. The company is in the process of filing patents for its technology.

The company has two products based on the same core technology. 'Lyric' was released in June 2002, although "early adopter" versions had been available since April 2001 through Seiko Instruments. In June 2003 Pulsic introduced 'Prelude', a new physical design suite including routing based on the same technology, using distributed computing. Lyric is positioned at those designs where blocks to be placed and routed are up to 100,000 gates, whereas Prelude partitions larger designs into blocks, which are then spawned off to Lyric running on a network of machines.

The performance of place and route tools is traditionally assessed in the size and speed of the resulting device. In the analogue and mixed-signal domain, design productivity is a key issue, as much of place and route is manual, and any automation that deals with signal integrity issues and angled wires can result in an order of magnitude improvement. According to Roberts, "Pulsic is targeting unmatched automation for place and route in the analogue space. For mixed-signal, we bring a unified interactive, semi-automatic and fully-automatic environment offering better usability than existing solutions." Pulsic's business model relies on one and three year time-based licenses as well as a perpetual license. Pricing for Lyric begins at $100k for a basic, single-node license.

The Chilli perspective

Technology shifts: as digital circuits shrink, more analogue effects come into play, where each wire becomes a potential internal antenna, and signal integrity becomes more of a challenge. With more high-frequency communication standards and designs emerging, including UWB (Uweeba), Wi-Max, etc, greater attention to mixed signal design integrity will be necessary.

COCS: the total cost of customers serviced and supported is an important metric for all EDA, IP and software vendors. Many such companies fall into a trap of supporting customers which are ultimately unprofitable, as the true cost of support exceeds the profit margin from the product deal. Pulsic is well positioned in this respect, both through it's history through Zuken and the OEM deal with Seiko, which gave it a number of steady blue chip customers, as well it's complete focus on a specialist niche. The company has developed a number of additional modules for specific customer applications, e.g. datapath, memory and flip-chip, that provide some vertical technologies alongside the broad analogue mixed-signal capability, and this will allow further penetration into it's blue chip customer base.

Partners: in EDA, partners and competitors are often the same companies. For an EDA product, it's vital to be able to integrate with the design flows in common use by customers. Pulsic's products interface to tools from Cadence, Synopsys and other vendors, and the company is a member of the Synopsys and Cadence partner programmes.

Competition: Pulsic has chosen to concentrate on the niche area of analogue and mixed-signal routing, which has a lower number of players than the digital realm. Cadence currently dominates this space with it's own shaped-based router, IC Craftsman (from it's acquisition of Cooper & Chyan). While Cadence is an 800-pound gorilla, it is better to have one large competitor than three, as is the case with other segments of the EDA industry.

Way forward & outlook: Pulsic has been something of a secret, so far. Being in stealth mode is great for gaining initial traction in a target niche, but the company must now raise its profile and scream and shout about its customers, revenues, and prepare for an exit. The company needs to demonstrate customers it can use as references - it's often tricky to convince conservative Japanese customers to provide testimonials, but this comes with time as the relationship develops deeper.

The company is a good example of the adage that it is wise to bury the NIH (not invented here) syndrome and get to market quickly with a unique proposition, whatever its provenance. This is a common story in North America, but in Europe, especially the UK, there has been a tendency to be preoccupied with original technology, rather than solving customer issues and commercial aspects.

Pulsic is well positioned with existing blue chip customers, to prepare for an exit within the next 12-18 months. This is most likely through acquisition by a larger EDA company looking to enter or strengthen their share of the analogue and mixed-signal place and route market. On current form, it could be a stretch for Pulsic to expand its headcount, sales and service centres from its existing base.


Comments on this story? Send an e-mail to editor@thechilli.com

© Chilli Publishing Ltd 2004

11FEB2004

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