Integrated Circuits Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Integrated Circuits stocks.

Integrated Circuits Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 17 TSM Dividend Watch: 3 Companies Boosting Payouts
May 17 TSM TSMC: Derisking China Invasion Threats
May 17 TSM Forget Nvidia, This Is the Only AI Stock You Need
May 17 TSM 3 No-Brainer Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks to Buy Now
May 17 TSM What's Going On With Applied Materials Stock Today?
May 17 TSM Key Apple Supplier TSMC's 42% Stock Surge Prompts Weighting Limits For Some Funds: What You Need To Know
May 16 TSM Coatue Management top Q1 moves: exits Apple, Disney, takes in Qualcomm, piles into TSMC
May 16 TXN Analysts Slash Price Targets On 3 Dividend Stocks - You May Want To Consider These Alternatives Instead
May 16 TSM Driver killed in incident at Arizona facility that is being built by a Taiwanese semiconductor giant
May 16 TSM Explainer: TSMC’s Arizona chip plant death demonstrates its mounting challenges in the US
May 16 STM Forget Nvidia: 3 Semiconductor Stocks to Buy Instead
May 16 TXN Intel upgraded, Texas Instruments initiated: Wall Street's top analyst calls
May 16 TXN Texas Instruments initiated at Underweight on revenue concerns: Wells Fargo
May 16 TSM Taiwan Semiconductor's Arizona facilities unharmed in waste disposal truck blast, driver dies - report
May 16 TSM TSMC Arizona Construction Site Blast Kills Truck Driver
May 16 TSM TSMC says no damage to its Arizona facilities after incident
May 16 TSM UPDATE 1-TSMC says no damage to its Arizona facilities after incident
May 16 TSM Fire units responding to explosion at TSMC plant in Phoenix, newspaper reports
May 15 TXN Texas Instruments notches 10 consecutive session of gains
May 15 TSM Funds Keep Buying Nvidia's Chipmaker, Amazon Stock And Costco
Integrated Circuits

An integrated circuit or monolithic integrated circuit (also referred to as an IC, a chip, or a microchip) is a set of electronic circuits on one small flat piece (or "chip") of semiconductor material, normally silicon. The integration of large numbers of tiny transistors into a small chip results in circuits that are orders of magnitude smaller, cheaper, and faster than those constructed of discrete electronic components. The IC's mass production capability, reliability and building-block approach to circuit design has ensured the rapid adoption of standardized ICs in place of designs using discrete transistors. ICs are now used in virtually all electronic equipment and have revolutionized the world of electronics. Computers, mobile phones, and other digital home appliances are now inextricable parts of the structure of modern societies, made possible by the small size and low cost of ICs.
Integrated circuits were made practical by mid-20th-century technology advancements in semiconductor device fabrication. Since their origins in the 1960s, the size, speed, and capacity of chips have progressed enormously, driven by technical advances that fit more and more transistors on chips of the same size – a modern chip may have many billions of transistors in an area the size of a human fingernail. These advances, roughly following Moore's law, make computer chips of today possess millions of times the capacity and thousands of times the speed of the computer chips of the early 1970s.
ICs have two main advantages over discrete circuits: cost and performance. Cost is low because the chips, with all their components, are printed as a unit by photolithography rather than being constructed one transistor at a time. Furthermore, packaged ICs use much less material than discrete circuits. Performance is high because the IC's components switch quickly and consume comparatively little power because of their small size and close proximity. The main disadvantage of ICs is the high cost to design them and fabricate the required photomasks. This high initial cost means ICs are only practical when high production volumes are anticipated.

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