InsideChips.com Releases 2003 Ventures-100 Report.Business Editors BELLINGHAM Bellingham (bĕl`ĭnghăm'), city (1990 pop. 52,179), seat of Whatcom co., NW Wash., a port of entry on Bellingham Bay, one of the best harbors on the U.S. Pacific coast, near Canada; inc. 1904. , Wash.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec. 5, 2002 InsideChips.com has released its 2003 Ventures-100 report profiling the hottest emerging chip ventures on the planet. The profiles provide essential information on each startup's history, key executives, financing, strategic focus, business model, technology/products, competition, strategic partners, and other relevant details. The annual volume is comprised of 100 selected startup profiles, originally published in the InsideChps.Ventures monthly report. These companies operate in a wide variety of existing and emerging markets, such as wireless LAN A local area network that transmits over the air typically in the 2.4 GHz or 5 GHz unlicensed frequency band. It does not require line of sight between sender and receiver. Wireless base stations (access points) are wired to an Ethernet network and transmit a radio frequency over an area , Internet Internet Publicly accessible computer network connecting many smaller networks from around the world. It grew out of a U.S. Defense Department program called ARPANET (Advanced Research Projects Agency Network), established in 1969 with connections between computers at the infrastructure, consumer electronics, networking, computer, telecom and others. Startups are the lifeblood life·blood n. 1. Blood regarded as essential for life. 2. An indispensable or vital part: Capable workers are the lifeblood of the business. of the semiconductor industry. By following their entrepreneurial en·tre·pre·neur n. A person who organizes, operates, and assumes the risk for a business venture. [French, from Old French, from entreprendre, to undertake; see enterprise. instincts and experience, the best and brightest in the chip business are providing focused attention to the innovative ideas critical to advancing IC technology. Some succeed, and some fail; but this process of new ventures budding budding, type of grafting in which a plant bud is inserted under the bark of the stock (usually not more than a year old). It is best done when the bark will peel easily and the buds are mature, as in spring, late summer, or early autumn. off from more established firms guarantees a continuous infusion into the industry of fresh ideas and novel approaches. In aggregate, startups represent the cutting edge of semiconductor innovation. The 2003 Ventures-100 report provides a penetrating penetrating breaching the tissues of the body. look into the current state-of-the-art of semiconductor innovation. The 128 page report is a must-have for any company partnering with, investing in, or selling products or services to semiconductor startups. Additional information can be obtained at www.insidechips.com. About InsideChips.com InsideChips is a B-2-B Internet venture that provides semiconductor industry business/marketing information and analysis, with a particular focus on emerging semiconductor ventures. Headquartered in Bellingham, Wash., the company is the publisher of InsideChips.Ventures, a monthly print- and Internet-based report that focuses on semiconductor startups and new technologies. |
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