May 2018 – Bittware, Inc., a global leading provider of computing systems featuring field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) deployed in data center compute and network packet processing applications, has been acquired by Molex. BittWare is a global provider of computing systems featuring field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) deployed in data centre compute and network packet processing applications.
Headquartered in Concord, New Hampshire, BittWare provides solutions based on FPGA technology from Intel and Xilinx. Many of the world’s leading companies use BittWare FPGA solutions to provide the processing power for demanding applications in data center, military, aerospace, government, instrumentation, test, financial services, broadcast and video. BittWare commercial products turn the latest FPGA device features into reliable board-level solutions, suitable for both development and deployment in integrated servers. The company serves Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) customers who value the decades of engineering experience BittWare brings to designing custom solutions.
Among the foremost FPGA computing platform developers, BittWare brings an impressive breadth of board-level computing technologies, integrated systems and software expertise. BittWare FPGA solutions provide the processing power for demanding applications in computer and data cetnre, military and aerospace, government, instrumentation and test, financial services, broadcast and video.
BittWare commercial products turn the latest FPGA device features into reliable board-level solutions, suitable for both development and deployment in integrated servers. The company serves original equipment manufacture customers, who value the decades of engineering experience BittWare brings to designing custom solutions and manufacturing them at scale with partners such as Benchmark Electronics.
BittWare products are supported with extensive tools, FPGA IP, and in-house technical support staff. BittWare provides solutions based on FPGA technology from Intel (formerly Altera) and Xilinx.