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Austek Microsystems

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in the cache controller market. In 1992 the Adelaide design office closed, the headquarters moved to Silicon Valley, and the company attempted to expand into chipsets. The company was wound up in 1994.
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Austek provided an environment of innovation, mentoring, design challenges, and experience that later went on to inject expertise to the VLSI industry within Australia and internationally.
249: 254: 169:-based computer systems; it operated at 20 MHz. This was followed in 1989 by the A38202 cache controller, also for 80386-based systems. 108: 46: 39: 89: 61: 165:
controllers. In 1987 it released the A38152, the world's first single-chip cache controller, to enhance the performance of
68: 196: 75: 35: 158: 57: 221:, "Australian Science at Work", published by The University of Melbourne eScholarship Research Centre 224: 234: 135: 82: 218: 151: 212: 243: 229: 24: 162: 123: 147: 173: 166: 139: 122: 215:, published by Australian Science and Technology Heritage Centre 143: 18: 161:
chips, but commercially their most successful products were
134:(1984–1994) was an Australian company founded by 127:Austek A38202 cache controller integrated circuit 8: 219:Austek Microsystems Pty Ltd (1984 - c. 1994) 172:Austek however was unable to compete with 250:Defunct technology companies of Australia 138:to commercialize technology developed by 109:Learn how and when to remove this message 150:, and a marketing and support office in 189: 45:Please improve this article by adding 16:Defunct Australian computer chip maker 146:programme. It had a design office in 7: 255:Electronics companies of Australia 14: 23: 1: 132:Austek Microsystems Pty. Ltd. 47:secondary or tertiary sources 157:Austek produced a number of 197:A38202 Product Announcement 271: 159:digital signal processing 235:Austek's correlator chip 213:Austek history to 1988 128: 34:relies excessively on 126: 58:"Austek Microsystems" 129: 230:The Austek A38202 225:The Austek A38152 199:, 12 October 1989 119: 118: 111: 93: 262: 200: 194: 114: 107: 103: 100: 94: 92: 51: 27: 19: 270: 269: 265: 264: 263: 261: 260: 259: 240: 239: 209: 204: 203: 195: 191: 186: 115: 104: 98: 95: 52: 50: 44: 40:primary sources 28: 17: 12: 11: 5: 268: 266: 258: 257: 252: 242: 241: 238: 237: 232: 227: 222: 216: 208: 207:External links 205: 202: 201: 188: 187: 185: 182: 152:Silicon Valley 142:through their 117: 116: 31: 29: 22: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 267: 256: 253: 251: 248: 247: 245: 236: 233: 231: 228: 226: 223: 220: 217: 214: 211: 210: 206: 198: 193: 190: 183: 181: 178: 175: 170: 168: 164: 160: 155: 153: 149: 145: 141: 137: 133: 125: 121: 113: 110: 102: 99:February 2012 91: 88: 84: 81: 77: 74: 70: 67: 63: 60: –  59: 55: 54:Find sources: 48: 42: 41: 37: 32:This article 30: 26: 21: 20: 192: 179: 171: 156: 131: 130: 120: 105: 96: 86: 79: 72: 65: 53: 33: 136:Craig Mudge 244:Categories 184:References 69:newspapers 36:references 148:Adelaide 83:scholar 85:  78:  71:  64:  56:  174:Intel 167:80386 163:cache 140:CSIRO 90:JSTOR 76:books 144:VLSI 62:news 38:to 246:: 154:. 49:. 112:) 106:( 101:) 97:( 87:· 80:· 73:· 66:· 43:.

Index


references
primary sources
secondary or tertiary sources
"Austek Microsystems"
news
newspapers
books
scholar
JSTOR
Learn how and when to remove this message

Craig Mudge
CSIRO
VLSI
Adelaide
Silicon Valley
digital signal processing
cache
80386
Intel
A38202 Product Announcement
Austek history to 1988
Austek Microsystems Pty Ltd (1984 - c. 1994)
The Austek A38152
The Austek A38202
Austek's correlator chip
Categories
Defunct technology companies of Australia
Electronics companies of Australia

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