Società Generale Semiconduttori

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Società Generale Semiconduttori
Company typePublic
IndustrySemiconductor industry
Founded1957; 67 years ago (1957)
FounderOlivetti and Telettra
Defunct1987 (1987)
Fatemerged with Semiconductor branch of Thomson SA
SuccessorSTMicroelectronics
HeadquartersAgrate Brianza, Lombardy, Italy[1]
Area served
Europe, Americas, Asia–Pacific

SGS (Società Generale Semiconduttori, English: General Semiconductor Company) was an Italian manufacturer of semiconductor devices, most notably diodes, transistors and DIP ICs.

History

In 1957, Mario Tchou, an engineer from Olivetti, convinced Adriano Olivetti to found an Italian electronic manufacturing company for production of solid-state electronic devices. Olivetti sends his son Roberto Olivetti and Mario Tchou to negotiate with Virgilio Floriani, president of Telettra, to establish a joint venture. Within the same year, Olivetti and Telettra found Società Generale Semiconduttori (SGS).[2] One of the reasons for SGS's foundation is the need of parts (diodes and transistors in particular) for Elea, a mainframe that was being developed by Olivetti. Headquarters of the company was located in Agrate Brianza.[3]

In 1960, Fairchild Semiconductor acquired one third of the company and a joint venture called SGS-Fairchild got formed. That gave SGS access to Fairchild's newly invented planar manufacturing technology.[4] The partnership ended in 1968 and Fairchild sold its SGS stocks to IRI-STET, predecessor of TIM.

On December 1971, SGS merges with ATES and forms SGS-ATES. On 23 April 1985, the company changes its name to SGS Microelettronica. 2 years later, SGS Microelettronica merges with Thomson Semiconductors to form SGS-Thomson, which later becomes STMicroelectronics in 1998.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ SGS-ATES (1983). SGS 25 anni (brochure).
  2. ^ Giuseppe Rao. "La sfida al futuro di Adriano e Roberto Olivetti. Il Laboratorio di Ricerche Elettroniche, Mario Tchou e l'Elea 9003". Mélanges de l'École française de Rome. Italie et Méditerranée. 115.
  3. ^ a b Salvatore Torrisi (2002). Imprenditorialità e distretti ad alta tecnologia: teoria ed evidenza empirica. Milano: Franco Angeli. p. 168.
  4. ^ Malerba, Franco (1985). The semiconductor business : the economics of rapid growth and decline. Internet Archive. Madison, Wis. : University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0-299-10460-3.