Copyright (c) 2002-2007 by Stargate Semiconductor Inc. All rights reserved.
Stargate Semiconductor Inc:

One Burlington Business Center
67 South Bedford Street, Suite 400W
Burlington, MA 01803 USA
Tel

Fax

www.stargatesemiconductor.com

 

Disclaimer of Warranty
StarGate assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions in these materials. THESE MATERIALS ARE PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED. StarGate further does not warrant the accuracy and completeness of the information, text, graphics, or other items contained within these materials. StarGate shall not be liable for any special, direct, indirect, incidental or consequential damages, including without limitation, lost revenues or lost profits, which may result from use of these materials. StarGate may make changes to these materials, or to the products described therein, at any time without notice. StarGate makes no commitment to update the information contained herein.

Trademark Information
The StarGate name, logo, CipherTime, SoC2, are all registered trademarks of StarGate Semiconductor Inc.

Other Trademarks
Note that within the StarGate website there may exist the names of other companies which may represent the respective company trademark. StarGate fully respects the copyright and protection rights of these trademarks and in providing these names does not grant the user any license to utilize those proprietary logos, service marks, or trademarks.

Privacy
StarGate is committed to respecting the privacy of any information that may be supplied to the company through Internet transmissions and will do all in its power to respect the privacy of all website users. However with regard to security the inherent nature of Internet transmissions implies that such communications must be treated with some caution. As a result of this, users must be aware that any message sent to our website may be read or intercepted by others.

 

HOME COMPANY INVESTORS PRODUCTS NEWS CONTACT OPPORTUNITIES COPYRIGHTS ©
Success Stories
 

While at WaveMark, Mr. Enoch was a key contributor of the color acceleration technology found at the heart of last years announced MPC8220i SoC Image Processor from Motorola. The MPC8220i solution allows manufacturers of color laser printers to compete economically with monochrome laser printers.

MPC8220i_BM
MPC82201_News
MPC82201 Brochure

 

Gene Zarkhin managed key development efforts in both hardware and software disciplines for SoundVision, the company who developed the Clarity ASIC used inside many of today's digital cameras.

www.farsharp.com
www.grandtech.net

 

In 1996 Mr. Enoch completed an ASIC for Steinbrecher Corp. supporting wireless digital communications for the indoor/outdoor PCS cellular market. His activities included defining tools and ASIC foundry partners as well as designing and prototyping the initial proof of concept of wideband transmultiplexing. The ASIC was co-developed with AT&T and the success of the project led to the sale of the Company to TellLabs Wireless in March of 96 for $76M.

Minicell 0
Minicell 1

 

Ken Kelly worked as Senior Engineering Manager at Digital Equipment Corp, where Ken built the Software team that produced the world's first truly portable, light, and thin notebook computers, the Hinote and HiNote Ultra. These new notebook computers were received well by the industry and started a new trend of ultra portable computing.

Hinote Ultra 0
Hinote Ultra 1

 

Working at Powerline Communications as a Principal Design Engineer, Marcell designed key products used to control Lighting, HVAC system, and Industrial Control Systems. These systems were built to withstand hard industrial environments and were immune to black-outs, brown-outs, noise, and ground-faulty conditions. These energy management/HVAC controllers used PLC (Power Line Carrier) and RS422/485 as a means of communicating.

PowerLine 0

 

As Vice President of Engineering and Vice President of Development for Pumatech, Inc.(1996 IPO), Ken, starting with only a few developers, built a worldclass engineering team that produced synchronization software which allowed customers to synchronize between their PC and Palm OS®, Pocket PC or Windows Mobile-based Smartphone devices. Nearing the end of his tenure at Pumatech, Ken was managing more than 300 people at five subdivision located domestically and overseas.

Pumatech 0