Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Leading small FPGA and programmable logic supplier; ~$500M revenue. Nexus and Certus families power edge AI, server management, and industrial automation with ultra-low power.
Lattice Semiconductor was founded in 1983 in Hillsboro, Oregon and has established itself as the leading provider of low-power, small-footprint field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) and programmable logic devices. Unlike Intel (Altera) and AMD (Xilinx) which target high-performance data center and aerospace FPGAs, Lattice focuses on the power-constrained edge: server management cards, industrial automation controllers, automotive ADAS, communications, and consumer electronics.\n\nLattice's product families—including the Nexus, CertusPro, and MachXO3D platforms—are differentiated by their ultra-low power consumption (often under 1W), small package sizes, and security features. The company has aggressively pivoted toward edge AI inference, launching the sensAI solution stack that enables neural network inference on resource-constrained devices without a GPU. Its Avant FPGA family targets mid-range applications with higher density and DSP capability.\n\nLattice generated approximately $500 million in annual revenue and has seen strong adoption in server OCP (Open Compute Project) platform management controllers and server security applications. The company operates a fabless model, manufacturing at TSMC and GlobalFoundries. Lattice has benefited from the broad push to run AI inference at the network edge and in data center management chips, positioning its ultra-low-power programmable logic as infrastructure for the AI era.
Fremont CA semiconductor etch and deposition (NASDAQ: LRCX) $14.9B FY2024 revenue; 3D NAND/HBM etch leader, 40%+ plasma etch share, $5B+ services revenue competing with Applied Materials and Tokyo Electron.
Lam Research Corporation is a Fremont, California-based semiconductor equipment company — publicly traded on the NASDAQ (NASDAQ: LRCX) as an S&P 500 Information Technology component — designing and manufacturing etch and deposition systems critical for semiconductor chip fabrication, providing products across plasma etch (removing material layers with precision), chemical vapor deposition (CVD — depositing thin films on wafers), atomic layer deposition (ALD — depositing single atomic layers with Angstrom-level precision), and related services through approximately 17,000 employees worldwide. In fiscal year 2024 (ending June 2024), Lam Research reported revenues of $14.9 billion, with strong revenue recovery driven by semiconductor industry capex expansion (NAND flash memory producers resuming equipment orders after the 2022-2023 memory market downturn, and DRAM producers expanding capacity for HBM — High Bandwidth Memory — required in NVIDIA AI GPU packages). CEO Tim Archer has positioned Lam Research as an "advanced process technology" partner rather than a pure equipment vendor: Lam's ALD-Select, VECTOR deposition, and Kiyo etch systems are co-developed with leading chipmakers (TSMC, Samsung, SK Hynix, Micron) for specific process nodes — creating application-specific systems optimized for 3nm logic, 1-alpha DRAM, and 200+ layer 3D NAND that require Lam's process understanding rather than generic equipment. Lam Research's Global Customer Support (GCS) organization provides equipment maintenance, spare parts, and process consulting services — generating $5+ billion annually in recurring service revenue that is less cyclical than equipment capital expenditure.
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