Atiq Raza was Hired as the CEO of NexGen in 1991, NexGen was later acquired by AMD in 1995. Raza was AMD's president and chief operating officer in the late 1990s after the NexGen acquisition.
He left AMD in 1999 and founded Raza Microelectronics, Inc. in 2002.[1]
In 2003, SandCraft Inc folded, and Raza acquired the rights to its intellectual property.
Behrooz Abdi became president and CEO in November 2007, and Raza Microelectronics changed its name to RMI Corporation in December 2007.[2]
In January 2008 Raza settled with the US Securities and Exchange Commission over an allegation of insider trading during 2006.[1][3]
RMI was not affiliated with Foundries Holdings, LLC, formerly known as Raza Foundries, Inc.
Most of RMI's revenue came from its multi-core processor product line, which had major customers from China including Huawei, ZTE, and H3C. The China business of RMI was built from scratch by its co-founder Sunny Siu. In 2008, RMI merged with NetLogic Microsystems, which was acquired by Broadcom in 2012.
Product lines
RMI had four product lines: three developed internally and one acquired.
The XLS was a smaller, lower-cost multicore multithreading MIPS-based CPU used for network processing. The XLS family had options with 1 or 2 CPU cores, each with 4 hardware threads; 2 to 8 Gigabit Ethernet interfaces or two 10-gigabit Ethernet interfaces; and 1 or 2 PCI-Express interfaces.[5] The XLS processor was widely used in Huawei's LTE base stations.
The Alchemy processor was originally developed by Alchemy Semiconductor, which was then purchased by AMD. This product line was purchased by RMI in 2006.[7] The Alchemy processor is a low-power MIPS architecturesystem-on-a-chip with integrated graphics and signal processing, designed for media players and portable video devices.[8]