Semtech has been working on IoT technology, and buying Sierra will accelerate that effort. Semiconductor maker Semtech has announced plans to acquire fellow chip vendor Sierra Wireless in an effort to accelerate its push into making internet of things components. Semtech makes a variety of analog and mixed-signal chips, including long-range, low-power wireless RF connectivity, power management, and video-broadcast equipment. Sierra Wireless makes dedicated IoT technology. Semtech has made steps toward this market but a takeover of Sierra would accelerate the effort. “We believe the next era of technology growth is the full digitization of our industrial world—the internet of everything,” Mohan Maheswaran, CEO of Semtech said in the statement. “Our vision is to build a simple, horizontal platform with the goal of accelerating this transformation and to bring about a smarter and more sustainable planet.” Sierra has a marketplace through which customers can buy wireless data plans for IoT devices. It also has a cloud-based IoT management platform called AirVantage, which lets customers manage all of their device subscriptions and optimize communications of their devices. Semtech was working on its own cloud platform for managing IoT deployments more efficiently, and Sierra could give it a jump start. With Semtech’s sensor chips and Sierra’s IoT connectivity, the two firms see potential in the following markets: Supply chain, logistics and asset management Utilities, including water, gas and electric metering Smart cities and building, including air quality monitoring and public safety Smart agriculture and species protection The all-cash deal is valued at $1.2 billion and includes Semtech taking on Sierra’s debt. Post-deal, Semtech projects its annual revenue will roughly double, including US$100 million of high-margin IoT cloud services recurring revenues, according to a statement from Semtech announcing the deal. The purchase is expected to close in early 2023. Semiconductor deals had chilled recently. A planned Nvidia/Arm deal was scuttled after massive opposition from regulators and competitors, and AMD’s purchase of Xilinx took nearly 18 months thanks to foot dragging by the Chinese government. Related content feature What is a digital twin and why is it important to IoT? Digital twins are virtual replicas of physical devices that IT pros and data scientists can use to run simulations before actual devices are built and deployed. Digital twins can also take real-time IoT data and apply AI and data analytics to optimiz By Josh Fruhlinger and Keith Shaw May 09, 2024 17 mins Internet of Things Network Security Networking news Tata Communications launches edge computing platform for enterprises The company will offer two pricing models for CloudLyte — one based on CPU resources used, and the other it terms as “use case as a service.” By Prasanth Aby Thomas May 07, 2024 3 mins Edge Computing Internet of Things how-to What is IPv6, and why is adoption taking so long? IPv6 has been in the works since 1998 to address the shortfall of IP addresses available under IPv4, yet despite its efficiency and security advantages, enterprise uptake is slow By Josh Fruhlinger Apr 01, 2024 9 mins Internet Internet of Things Networking news Cisco, partners to offer tailored IoT/OT packages Cisco plan highlights partners that specialize in operational technology and is aimed at fostering IT/OT convergence. By Michael Cooney Feb 29, 2024 3 mins Channel Sales Internet of Things Networking PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe