Texas Instruments ( ),
widely known as TI, is an American
company
based in Dallas
, Texas
, United States
, renowned for developing and commercializing
semiconductor and computer technology. TI is the No.
4
manufacturer of semiconductors worldwide after Intel
, Samsung and Toshiba, and is
the No. 2 supplier of chips for cellular handsets after Qualcomm
, and the
No. 1 producer of
digital signal processors (DSPs)
and
analog semiconductors,
among a wide range of other semiconductor products. Due to very
early understanding of the Internet back in spring 1986, the
company was the 13th firm to register its domain name, the famous
TI.com. It is one of
the 58 global brands to be in the Internet Hall of Fame owning a
two
letter domain name.
, the company was listed at number 215 on the Fortune 500.
History
Texas Instruments was founded by
Cecil
H. Green,
J. Erik
Jonsson,
Eugene McDermott, and
Patrick E. Haggerty in 1951. McDermott was one of
the original founders of
Geophysical Service in
1930.
McDermott, Green, and Jonsson were GSI
employees who purchased the company in 1941 on the day before
Pearl
Harbor
was attacked. In November, 1945, Patrick
Haggerty was hired as general manager of the Laboratory and
Manufacturing (L&M) division. By 1951, the L&M division,
with its defense contracts, was growing faster than GSI's
Geophysical division. The company was reorganized and initially
renamed General Instruments Inc. Because there already existed a
firm named
General Instrument,
the company was rechristened Texas Instruments that same year.
Geophysical Service Inc. became a subsidiary of Texas Instruments
which it remained until early 1988, when most of GSI was sold to
the Halliburton Company.
Geophysical Service Incorporated
Texas Instruments can trace it roots back to 1930 when Dr.
J. Clarence Karcher and Eugene McDermott
founded Geophysical Service, a pioneering provider of
seismic exploration services to the
petroleum industry. In 1939 the company
reorganized as Coronado Corp., an oil company with Geophysical
Service Inc (GSI), now as a subsidiary. On December 6, 1941,
McDermott along with three other GSI employees, J. Erik Jonsson,
Cecil H. Green, and H.B. Peacock purchased GSI, During
World War II, GSI built
electronics for the
U.S. Army Signal Corps and the
U.S. Navy. After the war GSI continued to
produce electronics. The rugged nature of equipment for the oil
industry and of military equipment were similar and thus continued
expansion into military contracts was a natural progression. In
1951 the company changed its name to Texas Instruments, GSI
becoming a wholly owned subsidiary of the new company.
An early
success story for TI-GSI came in the 1950s when GSI was able (under
a Top Secret government contract)
to monitor the Soviet
Union
's underground nuclear
weapons testing from outcrop
bedrock found in Oklahoma
.
Texas Instruments also continued to manufacture equipment for use
in the seismic industry, and GSI continued to provide seismic
services. After selling (and repurchasing) GSI, TI finally sold the
company to
Halliburton in 1988, at which
point GSI ceased to exist as a separate entity.
Defense electronics
Texas Instruments was also active in the
defense electronics market starting in 1942 with
submarine detection equipment, building on the seismic exploration
technology developed for the oil industry. This business was known
over time as the Laboratory & Manufacturing Division, the
Apparatus Division, the Equipment Group and the Defense Systems
& Electronics Group (DSEG).
During the 1980s quality became a focus area in this business.
During the early 80s a quality program was instituted. This
included wide spread
Juran training,
as well as promoting
Statistical process control,
Taguchi methods and
Design for Six Sigma. In the late 80s
TI, along with
Eastman Kodak and
Allied Signal, began involvement with
Motorola institutionalizing Motorola's
Six Sigma methodology. Motorola, who
originally develped the Six Sigma methodology, began this work in
1982. Note that TI's Six Sigma program began well before 1995 when
GE started its legendary Six Sigma policy. In 1992 the DSEG
division of Texas Instruments' quality improvement efforts were
rewarded by winning the
Malcolm Baldrige
National Quality Award for manufacturing.
The following are some of the major programs of the former TI
defense group
Radar systems
TI went on to produce side-looking radar systems, the first
terrain following radar and
surveillance radar systems for both the military and FAA. In 1967
TI demonstrated the first solid-state radar — Molecular Electronics
for Radar Applications (MERA). In 1976 TI developed a
microwave landing system prototype.
In 1984 TI developed the first
inverse synthetic aperture
radar (ISAR). The first single-chip
gallium arsenide radar module was
developed. In 1991 the Military Microwave Integrated Circuit
(MIMIC) program was initiated – a joint effort with Raytheon.
Infrared systems
In 1956 TI began research on
infrared
technology that led to several line scanner contracts and with the
addition of a second scan mirror the invention of the first
forward looking infrared
(
FLIR) in 1963 with production beginning in
1966. In 1972 TI invented the Common Module FLIR concept, greatly
reducing cost and allowing reuse of common components.
Missiles
In 1961 TI won the guidance and control system contract for the
defense suppression
AGM-45 Shrike
anti-radiation missile. This
led later to the prime on the
high-speed
anti-radiation missile (AGM-88 HARM) development contract in
1974 and production in 1981. In 1969 TI won the
Seeker contract. In 1986 TI won the Army
FGM-148 Javelin fire-and-forget man portable anti-tank
guided missile in a
joint venture with
Martin Marietta. In 1991 TI was
awarded the
AGM-154 Joint
Standoff Weapon (JSOW)
Military computers
Because of TI's dominance in military temperature range (silicon)
transistors and integrated circuits (ICs), TI won contracts for the
first IC-based computer for the U.S. Air Force in 1961 and for ICs
for the Minuteman Missile the following year. In 1968 TI developed
the data systems for
Mariner
Program. In 1991 TI won the F-22 Radar and Computer development
contract.
Laser-guided bombs
In 1964 TI began development of the first
laser guidance system for
precision-guided munitions (PGM)
leading to the
Paveway series of
laser-guided bombs (LGB)s. The first LGB
was the
BOLT-117.
Divestiture to Raytheon
As the defense industry consolidated, TI sold its defense business
to
Raytheon in 1997 for $2.95 billion. The
Department of Justice required that Raytheon divest the TI
Monolithic Microwave
Integrated Circuit (MMIC) operations after closing the
transaction.
The TI MMIC business accounted for less than
$40 million in 1996 revenues, or roughly two percent of the $1.8
billion in total TI defense revenues was sold to TriQuint
Semiconductor
, Inc. Raytheon retained its own existing
MMIC capabilities and has the right to license
TI's MMIC technology for use in future product applications from
TriQuint.
Shortly after Raytheon acquired TI DSEG, Raytheon then acquired
Hughes Aircraft from
General Motors Raytheon then owned TI's
Mercury Cadmium Telluride
detector business and
Infrared (IR) systems
group. In California, it also had Hughes infrared detector and an
IR systems business. When again the US government forced Raytheon
to divest itself of a duplicate capability, the company kept the TI
IR systems business and the Hughes detector business. As a result
of these acquisitions these former arch rivals of TI systems and
Hughes detectors work together.
Immediately after acquisition, DSEG was known as Raytheon TI
Systems (RTIS). It is now fully integrated into
Raytheon and this designation no longer
exists.
Semiconductors
Early in 1952 Texas Instruments purchased a patent license to
produce (germanium) transistors from WesternElectric Co., the
manufacturing arm of AT&T, for $25 000. By the end of that
year, it was already manufacturing and selling them. TI Vice
President Patrick Haggerty was the visionary at TI who realized the
future of this technology in the electronics industry. Later that
year responding to an ad in the New York Times for a research
director,
Gordon K. Teal was hired by Haggerty.
Teal who worked for
Bell
Labs
at Murray Hill, NJ
but was from Dallas desired to return to his native
Texas.
Teal started at TI on January 1, 1953, bringing with him his
expertise in growing semiconductor crystals. Haggerty had hired him
to establish a team of scientists and engineers to keep TI at the
leading edge of the new and rapidly expanding semiconductor
industry. Teal's first assignment was to organize what became TI's
Central Research Laboratories (CRL). Because of Teal's background,
this new department was based on Bell Labs.
Among his new hires was
Willis Adcock
who joined TI early in 1953. Adcock, who like Teal was a
physical chemist, began leading a small
research group focused on the task of fabricating "grown-junction
silicon single-crystal small-signal
transistors. Adcock later became the first TI Principal
Fellow.
First silicon transistor
In January 1954, M Tanenbaum et al at Bell Labs created the first
workable silicon transistor. (IEEE Spectrum, May 2004, p 48.) This
work was reported in the spring of 1954 at the IRE off-the-record
conference on Solid State Devices and later publised in the Journal
of Applied Physics, 26, 686-691(1955). Working independently in
April 1954, Gordon Teal at TI created the first commercial silicon
transistor and tested it on April 14, 1954. On May 10, 1954 at the
Institute of Radio Engineers (IRE) National Conference on Airborne
Electronics, in Dayton, Ohio, Teal revealed this achievement to the
world when he announced, "Contrary to what my colleagues have told
you about the bleak prospects for silicon transistors. I happen to
have a few of them here in my pocket." Teal also presented a paper,
"Some Recent Developments in Silicon and Germanium Materials and
Devices," at this
conference.http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/may04/3992]At this point TI
stood alone as the first volume manufacturer of silicon
transistors.However, the break through that began the "Silicon
Age", occurred in early 1955 when Tanenbaum et al invented the
diffused base silicon transistor created by solid state diffusion
of impurities, the technology that later lead to the invention of
integrated circuitry by Noyce and Kilby.In 1954, Texas Instruments
designed and manufactured the first
transistor radio. The Regency TR1 used
germanium transistors, as silicon transistors were much more
expensive at the time. This was an effort by Haggerty to increase
market demand for transistors.
First integrated circuits

Old logic IC produced by TI.
Employee
Jack Kilby while working at TI's
Central Research Labs invented the
integrated circuit in 1958. Kilby
recorded his initial ideas concerning the integrated circuit in
July 1958 and successfully demonstrated the world's first working
integrated circuit on September 12, 1958. Six months later
Robert Noyce of
Fairchild Semiconductor
independently developed the integrated circuit with integrated
interconnect, and is also considered an inventor of the integrated
circuit. Kilby won the 2000 Nobel Prize in Physics for his part of
the invention of the integrated circuit. Noyce's chip, made at
Fairchild, was made of
silicon, while
Kilby's chip was made of
germanium. In
2008 TI announced its new "Kilby Labs", a center of innovation
designed to foster creative ideas for breakthrough semiconductor
technology. Launched on September 12, the 50th anniversary of the
integrated circuit, the new labs will build on IC inventor Jack
Kilby's legacy of revolutionizing our lives through chip
innovation. Kilby's legacy is celebrated
Here
Standard TTL
The
7400 series of
transistor-transistor logic
(TTL) chips, developed by Texas Instruments in the 1960s,
popularized the use of integrated circuits in computer logic. The
military grade version of this was the 5400 series.
Microprocessor
Texas Instruments invented the hand-held
calculator in 1967 (they were $2,500 a piece) and
the single-chip
microcomputer in 1971,
and was assigned the first patent on a single-chip
microprocessor (invented by
Gary Boone) on Sep 4, 1973. This was disputed by
Gilbert Hyatt, formerly of the Micro Computer Company, in Aug 1990
when he was awarded a patent superseding TI's. This was over-turned
on June 19, 1996 in favor of TI.
(Note: Intel
is usually
given credit with Texas Instruments for the almost-simultaneous
invention of the microprocessor.)
First speech synthesis chip

Texas Instruments Speak & Spell
using a TMC0280 speech synthesizer.
In 1978, Texas Instruments introduced the first single-chip
LPC speech synthesizer. In 1976 TI began a
feasibility study memory intensive applications for bubble memory
then being developed. They soon focused on speech applications.
This resulted in the development the TMC0280 one-chip
Linear predictive coding (LPC)
speech synthesizer which was the first time a single silicon chip
had electronically replicated the human voice. This was used in
several TI commercial products beginning with
Speak & Spell which was
introduced at the Summer Consumer Electronics Show in June 1978. In
2001 TI left the speech synthesis business, selling it to Sensory
Inc. of Santa Clara, CA.
Creating a new industry
TI had two interesting problems with engineering and product
development after the introduction of the semiconductor and the
microprocessor.Firstly, most of the chemicals, machinery and
technologies needed to create semiconductors did not exist so TI
had to "invent" them.Secondly, the market was small for TI
electronic components in the early days so TI had to "invent" uses
to create the markets. For example TI created the first transistor
radio for this purpose. Another example, TI developed the first
wall mounted, computer controlled, home set-back thermostat in the
late '70s but nobody would buy it mostly because of its cost. TI
started an Industrial Controls division, based in Johnson City,
Tennessee, which built automated process control computers used in
the chemical and food industry and was very successful. This
business was eventually sold to
Siemens
AG in October, 1991. TI turned to military and government uses
and had many electro-mechanical devices used in the
Apollo rocket and
moon lander.
In 1969 several employees left TI to found
Mostek. In 1988
Cyrix spunoff
from Mostek.
Consumer electronics and computers
TI continued to be active in the consumer electronics market
through the 1970s and 1980s. In 1978, Texas Instruments introduced
the first single chip speech synthesizer and incorporated it in a
product called
Speak &
Spell, which was later immortalized in the movie
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial.
Several spinoffs, such as the
Speak
& Read and
Speak &
Math, were introduced soon thereafter.
In 1979, TI entered the
home computer
market with the
TI99/4, a competitor to such
entries as the
Apple II,
Tandy/
RadioShack
TRS-80 and the later
Atari 400/
800 series,
Commodore VIC-20 and
Commodore 64.
It discontinued the
TI-99/4A (1981), the
sequel to the 99/4, in late 1983 amidst an intense
price war versus
Commodore,
Atari, and others. At the 1983
Winter CES TI showed models 99/2 and the
Compact Computer 40 ,
the latter aimed at professional users. The
TI Professional (1983) ultimately joined the
ranks of the many unsuccessful
DOS and
x86-based—but
non-compatible—competitors
to the
IBM PC. (The founders of
Compaq, an early leader in PC compatibles, all came
from TI.) The company for years successfully made and sold
PC-compatible
laptops before withdrawing
from the market and selling its product line to
Acer in 1997.
Artificial Intelligence
TI was active in the 1980s in the area of
Artificial Intelligence. It
developed and sold the
Explorer computer
family of
Lisp Machines. For the
Explorer a special 32bit Lisp microprocessor was developed, which
was used in the Explorer II and the
TI
MicroExplorer (a Lisp Machine on a
Nubus
board for the
Apple
Macintosh).
Sensors and controls
Texas Instruments was a major
OEM of
sensor, control, protection, and
RFID products for the automotive, appliance, aircraft,
and other industries. The S&C division was headquartered in
Attleboro, Massachusetts.
TI announced on Monday, January 9, 2006 that
Bain Capital LLC, a private equity firm,
would purchase the Sensors & Controls division for $3.0 billion
in cash. The RFID portion of the division remained part of TI,
transferring to the Application Specific Products business unit of
the Semiconductor division. The sale was completed in the first
half of 2006, with the newly formed independent company taking on
the name
Sensata Technologies.
Sensata Technologies is headed
by Tom Wroe as Chairman of the newly formed company with its
headquarter in Attleboro. Sensata Technologies has manufacturing
sites in Mexico, Malaysia, China & the Dominican Republic. The
Business Centres remain in Attleboro, MA, USA as well as the
Netherlands and Japan.
Software
TI sold its software division (along with its main product, the
IEF) to
Sterling Software in 1997. It is now part
of
Computer Associates. TI still owns small
pieces of software though, i.e. software for calculators like
TI Interactive!. TI also creates a
significant amount of target software for its Digital Signal
Processors, along with host based tools for creating DSP
applications.
TI today
Today, TI is made up of two main divisions: Semiconductors (SC) and
Educational Technology (ET).
Semiconductors
Semiconductor products account for
approximately 96 percent of TI's revenues. TI has a market leading
position in many different product areas, including
digital signal processors in the
TMS320 series, high speed
digital-to-analog and
analog-to-digital
converters,
power management
solutions, and high performance
analog
circuits. Wireless communications has been a primary focus for
TI, with around 50 percent of all
cellular phones sold worldwide containing TI
chips. TI also manufactures other semiconductor products, ranging
from application-specific
integrated
circuits to
microcontrollers.
Wireless Terminal Business Unit
The
Wireless Terminal Business Unit (WTBU) of the Semiconductor
division was,aa until 2007 when it was superseded by Qualcomm
, the world's
largest supplier of wireless chipsets. Mobile Connectivity
Solutions (MCS), located in Israel (TIIL) is also part of WTBU,
developing chips for Bluetooth and WLAN.
WTBU does also have
sites in Bangalore
(TII), India
, Nice
(TIF),
France
and Aalborg
, Denmark
(TIDK) doing the reference design.
Mixed Signal Automotive
Mixed Signal Automotive is a business unit within High Volume
Analog and Logic SBE that manufactures mixed signal and analog
solutions for automotive applications.
Application Specific Products
Another business unit of the Semiconductor division called
Application Specific Products (ASP) develops specific products that
cater to a broad range of DSP applications, such as
digital still camera,
cable modems,
Voice
over IP (VOIP), streaming media,
speech compression and recognition,
wireless LAN and gateway products
(residential and
central office), and
RFID.
DLP
TI is the sole source for
digital light processing
micro-mirror components, a technology used in video projectors and
televisions as well as movie theatres or cinemas.
DLP
Cinema.
Microcontrollers
- MSP430 - low cost, low power consumption,
and general purpose 16-bit MCU for use in embedded
applications
- TMS320C2xxx - 16
and 32 bit MCU family optimized for real-time control applications.
- C24X - 16 bit, fixed point, 20 to 40 MHz
- C28X - 32 bit, fixed or floating point, 100 to
150 MHz
- Stellaris ARM Cortex-M3 based
32-bit MCU family
In the past, TI has also sold microcontrollers based on ARM7
(TMS470) and 8051 cores.
Digital signal processors
TI makes a broad range of digital signal processors and a suite of
tools called
eXpressDSP, used to develop
applications on these chips.
Texas Instruments TMS320
- See main article on Texas Instruments TMS320
- TMS320C2xxx - 16
and 32 bit dsps optimized for control applications.
- TMS320C5xxx - 16
bit fixed point, low power. 100 to 300 MHz
- TMS320C6xxx -
family of High performance DSPs. 300 to 1000 MHz
Others
TMS320C33, TMS320C3x, TMS320C4x, TMS320C5x and TMS320C8x -
multiprocessor dsp.
Most of the older DSPs are still available through
TI's military dsp site
Multi-core processors
- OMAP microprocessors are processors
designed for battery powered applications, originally cell phones.
As a rule they contain an ARM application processor (currently
Cortex-A8, previously ARM11 or ARM9), a DSP (currently C6000,
previously often C55), and sometimes other cores.
- DaVinci
microprocessors contain a C64 series DSP core, an ARM9 core for
applications processing, and specialized video processing
peripherals.
Competitors
TI has always been among the Top 10 of the semiconductor sales
leaders.
In 2005, TI was number 3, after Intel
and Samsung, and ahead of Toshiba
and STMicroelectronics.
For more information, refer to the Semiconductor sales leaders
by year. Some of its main competitors include
Microchip Technology,
Cypress Semiconductor,
Integrated Device Technology,
Samsung Electronics, and
Xilinx.
TI has the largest market share in the analog semiconductor
industry which has an estimated market TAM exceeding US$37 Billion.
TI is reported to have 14% of the market, leading ahead of
competitors ST Microelectronics, Infineon and NXP Semiconductors
according to latest reports from
Gartner.
TI E2E Community
In 2008, Texas Instruments launched its
E2E Community, a
place for engineers from all over the world an opportunity to
discuss and find support for their electronic design
projects.
Educational Technology
Texas Instruments is also notable for its calculator range, the
TI-30 being one of the most popular early
calculators. TI has also developed a line
of
graphing calculators, the
first being the
TI-81, and most popular being
the
TI-83 Plus (with the
TI-84 Plus being an updated equivalent). TI is
often seen as the competitor to
Hewlett-Packard in this regard, with fierce
loyalties often arising.
TI Calculator Community
In the 1990s, with the advent of TI's graphing calculator series,
programming became popular among some students. The TI-8x series of
calculators (beginning with the
TI-81) came
with a built-in BASIC interpreter, through which simple programs
could be created. The
TI-85 was the first TI
calculator to allow assembly programming (via a shell called
"ZShell"), and the
TI-83 was the first in the
series to receive native assembly. While the earlier BASIC programs
were relatively simple applications or small games, the modern
assembly-based programs rival what one might find on a
Game Boy or
PDA.
Around the same time that these programs were first being written,
personal web pages were becoming popular (through services such as
Angelfire and
GeoCities), and programmers began creating
websites to host their work, along with tutorials and other
calculator-relevant information. This led to the formation of TI
calculator
webrings, and eventually a few
large communities, including the now-defunct TI-Files, and active
ticalc.org.
Ticalc.org is now seen as the authoritative source for programming
for TI calculators, and at the site, one can find thousands of
applications (including games, educational programs, and even
simple operating environments), programming tutorials, calculator
news, and discussion forums, among other things.
TI graphing calculators generally fall into two distinct groups,
those powered by the
Zilog Z80 and those
running on the
Motorola 68000 series.
Although a derivative of the Z80 was in the original
Game Boy, the 68000 is far more powerful, and
therefore better suited for gaming and processor intensive
applications. The 68K calculators, which include the
TI-89/
Titanium,
TI-92/
Plus, and
Voyage 200, are generally thought of more highly
among TI community members than the Z80s. However, the newest of
the Z80 series, the
TI-83 Plus and
TI-84 Plus Silver Edition,
are becoming very popular with students new to the product
line.
The
TI-84 Plus Silver
Edition comes preloaded with a variety of student-oriented
apps, including
App4Math, a
computer algebra system developed
for the calculator.
A recent development are the models of the
TI-Nspire family, which reached the market in fall
2007. These models integrate seamlessly various mathematical
software environments and are available as handhelds as well as
software.
There is an ongoing debate among financial calculator fans as to
whether the popular TI BA II Plus is superior to the iconic Hewlett
Packard
HP-12C from 1981. The TI BA II Plus
continues to maintain popularity due to its simple and intuitive
layout compared to the HP 12c (which uses reverse polish notation).
The TI BA II Plus is the only calculator permissible in the
Chartered Financial
Analyst exams besides the HP-12C.
There are many TI calculators still selling without graphing
capabilities. The
TI-30 has been replaced by
the
TI-30X IIS.There are even some financial
calculators for sale on the TI website.
Industry recognition
In 2007, Texas Instruments was awarded the Manufacturer of the Year
for Global Supply Chain Excellence by World Trade magazine.
A more complete list of TI's awards and recognition can be found
here
Values and Ethics
Texas Instruments is known to uphold values and is considered
highly ethical. In three consecutive years (2007, 2008 and 2009),
TI made it to the list of most ethical companies in the world,
compiled by
Ethisphere
Institute. TI is the only company to appear in all three years'
list in the Electronics/Semiconductor category.
Acquisitions
- 1997 Amati Communications - $395 million
- 1998 GO DSP
- 1999 Telogy Networks - $457 million
- 2000 Burr-Brown
Corporation - $7.6 billion
Headquarters Quick Tour
The headquarters at Dallas, TX has a Highway In Between it.There
are even some
Raytheon Buildings that TI
rented to Raytheon!Areas:
- North Campus
- TI Main 2; Labs and Design
- Others
- South Campus
- TI Main; ESD and Others
- TI Headquarters
(Possibly) Others
Corporate Governance
See also
References
- " TI Mailing Address." Texas Instruments.
Retrieved on June 12, 2009.
- Databeans
http://www.databeans.net/reports/2009_php_files/09ANALOG_MarketShare.php
- VB.com
Internet Hall of Fame List of Large Companies that own a Two Letter
Domain
- TI web site history page,(c. 2008), (HTML),
Texas Instruments, accessed Sep 6, 2008.
- Why the IR detectormarket is in flux Retrieved
on October 28, 2008
- Raytheon TI Systems - IMPORTANT
INFORMATION
- "A tribute to J. Erik Jonsson" : bio from Texas
Instruments
- The Chip that Jack Built, (c. 2008),
(HTML), Texas Instruments, accessed May 29, 2008.
- Robert Noyce, (n.d.), (online), IEEE
Global History Network, accessed July 8, 2008.
- Nobel Web AB, (October 10, 2000), The Nobel Prize in Physics 2000,
Retrieved on May 29, 2008
- Kilby Labs Announcement
http://focus.ti.com/pr/docs/preldetail.tsp?sectionId=594&prelId=c08055
- "U.S. Patent 3,757,306, Computing Systems CPU,
Awarded September 4, 1973
- "For Texas Instruments, Some Bragging Rights"
New York Times, June 20, 1996
- “Smithsonian Speech Synthesis History Project”,
accessed Sep 7, 2008
- http://education.ti.com
- "Manufacturer of the Year", World Trade, Vol. 20., No. 5, May
2007, p. 20.
-
http://www.ti.com/corp/docs/csr/corpgov/BoardOfDirectors.shtml
External links