About Texas Instruments

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Texas Instruments is the world's leading analog chip manufacturer. Its predecessor, Geophysical Services (GSI), was founded in 1930 and renamed Texas Instruments in 1951. Since it began manufacturing transistors in 1952, the company is currently committed to designing, manufacturing and selling analog and embedded processing chips. The company currently provides more than 80,000 products to more than 100,000 customers worldwide, and operates 12 wafer fabs, 7 packaging and testing plants, and several bump processing and wafer testing plants at 15 production bases around the world. Texas Instruments' main businesses include analog chips and embedded processors, and its product categories cover amplifiers, audio, clocks and timing, ADC/DAC, DLP, interfaces, isolation devices, logic and voltage conversion, MCU and processors, motor drives, power management, RF and microwave, sensors and other fields, with a total of about 80,000 product portfolios. These products are widely used in many fields such as industry, automobiles, consumer electronics, etc., bringing a stable source of income to Texas Instruments. Texas Instruments has a market share of about 2.9% of the global semiconductor market and a share of about 19% of the analog market. In 2010, Texas Instruments' automotive business revenue reached $1 billion.