Symmetricom

formerly Public
Traded as NASDAQ: SYMM
Industry Electronic Products
Successor Microsemi
Headquarters San Jose, California, USA
Revenue $208.1 Million (FY 2011)
$4.3 Million (FY 2011)
$24.3 Million (FY 2011)
Total assets $235.8 Million (FY 2011)
Total equity $184.2 Million (FY 2011)
Number of employees
584 (June 2011)
Website http://www.symmetricom.com

Symmetricom, Inc. (NASDAQ: SYMM) (now acquired by Microsemi) developed, manufactured, and supplied timekeeping technology to customers in industry and government worldwide that require extremely precise synchronization. Symmetricom products supported precise timing standards, including GPS-based timing, IEEE 1588 (PTP), Network Time Protocol (NTP), Synchronous Ethernet and Data Over Cable Service Interface Specifications (DOCSIS®) timing.

Products included hydrogen masers, rubidium and cesium atomic standards, temperature and oven controlled crystal oscillators, miniature and chip scale atomic clocks, network time servers, network sync management systems, cable timekeeping solutions, telecom synchronization supply units (SSUs), and timing test sets.

Symmetricom was one of the only two world’s commercial supplier of cesium atomic standards (atomic clocks) - the other one is Oscilloquartz, in Switzerland. By weighted average, Symmetricom atomic clocks contributed over 90% of UTC (Coordinated Universal Time, the world time standard). The BIPM (International Bureau of Weights and Measures) calculates UTC by averaging the combined contributions of the national laboratories of its member countries.

Symmetricom was headquartered in San Jose, California with research and development centers in Boulder, Colorado; Beverly, Massachusetts; Tuscaloosa, Alabama; and Beijing, China.

References

    Symmetricom was acquired by Microsemi in Oct 2013

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.