On-Prem

Systems

Big chip players join forces to form another RISC-V venture

Initial drive starts in Germany, pushes automotive blueprints


The RISC-V open instruction set architecture got a boost today after it emerged that five chip giants are coming together to jointly invest in a company to develop reference architectures based on the standard.

The new entity will be formed in Germany with investment from Infineon Technologies, Qualcomm, NXP Semiconductors, Bosch, and Nordic Semiconductor, with the aim of speeding up "the commercialization of future products based on the open-source RISC-V architecture."

If this sounds a bit vague, it is because the company's formation is subject to regulatory approvals in various jurisdictions, and so at this stage the founding corporations are unable to add any further detail about how much investment is involved, when it is expected to begin operations, or even what the company will be called.

What we do know is that this will not be a chip manufacturing operation, but will focus on the creation of reference designs to help increase the adoption of the RISC-V architecture. The aim is to establish the company as a single source for developing compatible RISC-V-based products.

Given the involvement of NXP and Infineon, it is perhaps not surprising the initial focus will be around automotive applications, with an eventual expansion to include mobile and IoT ecosystems.

A spokesperson for Infineon told us the RISC-V company may operate more like a consultancy, and hinted at the possibility of some sort of branding or labelling that others which make chips based on the reference architecture will be able to use to show their compatibility with the standard.

Infineon plans to sell products employing RISC-V alongside other kit using existing well-established microcontroller cores, the spokesperson said.

In a canned statement accompanying the announcement, NXP Executive Vice President and Chief Technology Officer Lars Reger said the joint will try to "pioneer fully certified RISC-V-based IP and architectures, initially for the automotive industry."

"The creation of a one-stop-shop ecosystem where customers can select turnkey assets will strengthen the adoption of RISC-V across many European industries," Reger added.

The President of Infineon's Automotive Division Peter Schiefer said that as vehicles become software-defined, there is a general need for standardization and ecosystem compatibility across the industry.

Qualcomm's involvement is of note, as the chipmaker is embroiled in a legal spat with Arm over licensing, and has previously hinted that it might, at some point, favour RISC-V over the Arm architecture for products including its popular Snapdragon smartphone chips. Qualcomm is also involved in the automotive sector, especially for dashboard systems.

"We believe RISC-V's open-source instruction set will increase innovation and has the potential to transform the industry," Qualcomm SVP of Product Management Ziad Asghar, said in a supplied statement.

Although this latest development targets processor designs, the Linux Foundation and a bunch of big names in tech announced in June an initiative to make more software available for RISC-V platforms.

Dubbed RISE for RISC-V Software Ecosystem, this is intended to improve the availability of RISC-V software across a range of industry sectors, including mobile, datacenter and automotive. ®

Send us news
16 Comments

A chip off the old block: The 200mm fab supply chain breaker

Southeast Asia, China spearheading factory capacity growth for foreseeable future

Post-IPO, Arm to push purpose-built almost-processors

British chip design biz plans to satisfy investors by seeking new customers, while RISC-V and China are already challenges

Intel slaps forehead, says I got it: AI PCs. Sell them AI PCs

People try to put us down, talkin' 'bout ML generation

Intel aims to patch semiconductor skills gap with one-year cert program

New fabs won't achieve much without specialized staff to fill them

Uncle Sam is this keen to keep US CHIPS funds out of China

Meanwhile, GlobalFoundries scores $3B DoD contract to fab chips for military, aerospace

US DoD serves up $238M Chips Act funding to 8 regional hubs

Hoping to bridge the dreaded 'lab-to-fab' gap where R&D dreams go to die

Intel starts mass production on Intel 4 node using EUV in Irish fab

First Euro facility to use the next-gen lithography tech for commercial production

Car industry pleads for delay to post-Brexit tariffs on EVs

Gets blanked again

FYI: Those fancy 'Google-designed' TPU AI chips had an awful lot of Broadcom help

And Meta's tapping up Big B too – it's big bucks for this silicon giant

Volkswagen stuck in neutral after 'IT disruption'

Factories and offices are going nowhere, fast

Chip firm accused of IP theft bites back, claims Apple's contracts are rotten

iGiant says Rivos poached talent and SoC designs in '22

AI startup Lamini bets future on AMD's Instinct GPUs

Oh MI word: In the AI race, any accelerator beats none at all