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AUSTIN, TX, Feb. 7, 2005 - Test tool provider National Instruments has acquired the Toronto, Canada-based EDA company Electronics Workbench.
The companies have worked together for years, and National said the
acquisition would strengthen the integration between functional test
and design tools and advance graphical system design technology.
National said it would retain all of Electronics Workbench's
approximately 50 worldwide employees, and the EDA firm may hire
additional personnel after budgeting talks concluded.
National would not disclose the cost of the transaction.
"Our customers are not satisfied with the integration of design,
simulation and test tools in the industry today," said Ray Almgren,
National's vice president of product marketing and academic relations.
"A graphical system design platform that integrates these disparate
tools will increase productivity and make testing throughout the design
process more seamless. Our acquisition of Electronics Workbench is a
major step forward in making this vision a reality and satisfying the
needs of the design engineering community in industry and academia."
For several years, Electronics Workbench and National have
collaborated to integrate MultiSIM with National's LabVIEW graphical
development environment through downloadable software and technical
resources. The Electronics Workbench acquisition adds graphical design
and simulation software to National's platform of graphical development
tools.
Almgren said National wasn't acquiring Electronics Workbench
in order to become a pure-play EDA company like Mentor Graphics or
Cadence Design Systems.
"I think that goes back to the frame of reference the industry
has: You're either an EDA company or a test company. We're going to
become a system design tool company. We're going to innovate on a
vector that these guys simply aren't interested in working on," Almgren
said. "Our customers tend to be in functional test. The integration
between design and test is not very good. In the short term, we can
make a lot of improvements."
Bill Wignall, president of Electronics Workbench, explained,
"The reality is that Cadence and Mentor are all about IC design. The
place where design and test are already integrated is in the IC world.
There's no wish from this acquisition to take on those guys. We want to
do for system design what's already been done for IC design."
National will retain all Electronics Workbench employees and
continue to operate the company as a separate entity in Toronto.
Development teams will work to further integrate the products and
knowledge of the two companies. As a wholly owned subsidiary of
National, Electronics Workbench plans to continue to develop and offer
its complete line of design automation software and directly support
educational initiatives with uninterrupted support to participating
schools.
The acquisition is not expected to have a material impact on National's earnings for the first quarter of 2005.
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