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SandForce : ウィキペディア英語版
SandForce

SandForce was an American fabless semiconductor company based in Milpitas, California, that designed and manufactured flash memory controllers for solid-state drives (SSDs). On January 4, 2012, SandForce was acquired by LSI Corporation and became the Flash Components Division of LSI.〔〔"ss"/> LSI was subsequently acquired by Avago Technologies on May 6, 2014〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://finance.yahoo.com/news/avago-technologies-completes-acquisition-lsi-133032023.html )〕 and on the 29th of that same month Seagate Technology announced its intention to buy LSI's Flash Components Division.
SandForce was founded in 2006 by Alex Naqvi and Rado Danilak, as a startup company. In April 2009, they announced their entrance into the solid-state drive market.
SandForce did not sell complete solid-state drives, but rather flash memory controllers, called SSD processors, to partners who then built and sold complete SSDs to manufacturers, corporations, and end-users. However, another division of LSI uses the SandForce SSD processor in the LSI Nytro PCIe product line. The key component of any SSD is actually the controller, upon which SandForce focuses. Zsolt Kerekes, an SSD Market Analyst and publisher of StorageSearch.com, said in 2011 that SandForce was the best-known maker of SSD controllers.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title= SandForce - circa 2011 )
==History==
Alex Naqvi and Rado Danilak had experience from companies including Marvell, Intel, NVIDIA, Toshiba, and SanDisk when they started SandForce.〔 At the end of 2009, there were approximately 100 employees at SandForce.
SandForce was initially financed by private equity firms Storm Ventures, Doll Capital Management, and unnamed computer data storage firms.〔 By April 2009, SandForce had taken in more than $20 million in two venture rounds.〔 In November that same year they closed a series C funding round of $21 million led by TransLink Capital and included LSI, ADATA, and other Tier-1 storage OEMs, including Seagate.〔 Finally in October 2010, SandForce closed a series D round of $25 million led by Canaan Partners and included the existing investors.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=SandForce rolls SSD processor line )
The board of directors included Carl Amdahl (General Partner at DCM and son of Gene Amdahl), Ryan Floyd (General Partner at Storm Ventures), S. "Sundi" Sundaresh (former President and CEO of Adaptec), Jackie Yang (Managing Director at TransLink Capital), and Eric Young (General Partner and co-founder at Canaan Partners). C.S. Park, a current Seagate board member and also a former chief executive at Maxtor and former chief executive at Hynix was also on the board until sometime before mid 2011.〔〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.sandforce.com/index.php?id=20&parentId=1 )
On October 26, 2011, LSI Corporation announced the intent to acquire SandForce and by January 4, 2012, the deal was finalized with SandForce becoming the new Flash Components Division of LSI led by Michael Raam.〔 On December 16, 2013, Avago Technologies announced its intent to acquire LSI and the deal was completed on May 6, 2014.〔 On May 29, 2014, Seagate Technology announced it had entered into an agreement with Avago to purchase LSI's Flash Components Division.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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