Board, circuit
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2005.0172.001
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- OBJECT TYPE
- integrated/daughterboard
- DATE
- 2000–2005
- ARTIFACT NUMBER
- 2005.0172.001
- MANUFACTURER
- SiberCore Technologies
- MODEL
- SCTB2409-B
- LOCATION
- Kanata, Ontario, Canada
More Information
General Information
- Serial #
- N/A
- Part Number
- 1
- Total Parts
- 2
- AKA
- N/A
- Patents
- N/A
- General Description
- Synthetic board/ Synthetic and metal circuitry
Dimensions
Note: These reflect the general size for storage and are not necessarily representative of the object's true dimensions.
- Length
- 15.0 cm
- Width
- 7.6 cm
- Height
- N/A
- Thickness
- 1.3 cm
- Weight
- N/A
- Diameter
- N/A
- Volume
- N/A
Lexicon
- Group
- Computing Technology
- Category
- Development & maintenance equipment
- Sub-Category
- N/A
Manufacturer
- AKA
- SiberCore
- Country
- Canada
- State/Province
- Ontario
- City
- Kanata
Context
- Country
- Canada
- State/Province
- Ontario
- Period
- circa 2000-2005
- Canada
-
Part of a collection of equipment and samples from Canadian company Sibercore Technologies, which made integrated circuits for use by the backbone providers of the internet (e.g. Cisco, Fijitsu etc.), specifically TCAMS (The lot contains sets of masks (32 and 30 per set) for their 40 mm and 27 mm products as well as test equipment and samples from the chip manufacturers in original packaging (one set unopened - and should not be). There is a complete set of CADD circuit drawings for the 27 mm chips as well as equipment used in the testing and burn-in of chips. A variety of promotional material has also been provided including a CD with a Power Point presentation used by the Marketing Group. Founded in 1998, SiberCore Technologies was a fabless semiconductor company based in Kanata, Ontario (with sales offices in Boston and Sacramento). The company developed a leading edge networking semiconductor memory based upon numerous Ternary Content Addressable Memory (TCAM) patents. It made ICs for use by the backbone providers of the Internet, e.g. Cisco, Fijitsu, etc. The company raised over $75 million of venture capital in four separate funding rounds between 1998 and 2002. The company secured designs at several top tier companies including Cisco, Lucent, Fujitsu, Tellabs, Hitachi, Marconi, Riverstone, Laurel Networks, and L-3. However, sales never reached above $10M per year as the post-bubble market for high end networking equipment failed to reach its forecasted potential. At its peak, the company employed 85 personnel, the bulk of them semiconductor design engineers at the company headquarters in Kanata, Ontario. The company began scaling back operations in 2003, and in 2004 announced that it would gradually wind-down operations. This wind down was completed in October 2005. As a "fabless" semiconductor company, SiberCore designed and sold its products, but manufacturing and test was performed by companies that specialize in those fields. The company's first prototype wafers were manufactured by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) and the wafers for all other designs were produced by United Microelectronics Corporation (UMC). Final assembly and test of the semiconductors was performed by Advanced Semiconductor Engineering (ASE). All three of these companies are based in Taiwan. - Function
-
A daughterboard or daughtercard is a circuit board meant to be an extension or "daughter" of a motherboard (or 'mainboard'), or occasionally of another card. In particular, daughterboards often have plugs, sockets, pins, connectors, or other attachments for other boards. - Technical
-
An example of a piece of equipment used in the manufacture of TCAMS (Ternary Content Addressable Memories (TCAMs) which are high speed specialized memory devices). The provided chips show the evolution from 0.25 micron to 0.18 and 0.15 micron based masks for production of ICs from 2000 to 2005. With 2, 4.5, 9 and 18M memories, the SiberCore chips were key components driving the Internet hubs at Gigabit speeds at the level of hubs, large, and small business networks as well as access networks (Internet Service Providers or ISPs). SiberCore's chips employed Ternary Content Addressable Memory (TCAM) technology. The function of the TCAMs was to provide searches (up to 100 million / sec) for such things as search engines or look up tables for web site and e-mail DNS #s. Ternary Content Addressable Memories (TCAMs) are specialized devices where the contents can be searched at extremely high rates. A TCAM supports the traditional read and write operations as in typical memories, but also incorporates additional circuitry to search its entire contents in a single operation. SiberCore's TCAMs permitted searches at the rate of up to 100 million search operations per second. The search functionality of TCAMs is ideal for many different applications in networking equipment. For example, every connection point on the internet needs to know how to transmit data from all sources to all destinations (i.e. every connection point needs to know how to send data from Computer A to Computer B). This "routing" information is typically stored in TCAMs and when data from Computer A arrives at a node, a search of the TCAM is performed and information about how to send the data to Computer B is determined. - Area Notes
-
Unknown
Details
- Markings
- Light green lettering on board reads 'SiberCore Technologies - SCTB2409 - B Rev. 1.1'/ Black lettering on component reads 'SiberCore/ SCT9020AG-2/ QF5RJ/ 0245 AAAAC'
- Missing
- Unknown
- Finish
- Green board/ Black and silver elements/ Multicoloured synthetic elements
- Decoration
- N/A
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If you choose to share our information about this collection object, please cite:
SiberCore Technologies, Board, circuit, circa 2000–2005, Artifact no. 2005.0172, Ingenium – Canada’s Museums of Science and Innovation, http://collection.ingeniumcanada.org/en/item/2005.0172.001/
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