Qualcomm acquires RISC-V focused Ventana Micro Systems

Posted by fork-bomber 1 day ago

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Comment by nrclark 1 day ago

Most SOCs on the market today have a mix of various CPU cores. It's common to see designs with a few big ARM Cortex-A cores running an OS like Linux or Android, and then some smaller Cortex-M microcontroller cores that do housekeeping things like security checks, power management, realtime features, peripheral management, etc.

If I were to guess, Qualcomm wants to replace its various Cortex-M cores with RISC-V equivalents. This saves them money on licensing, reduces their dependency on ARM, and doesn't break customer-facing compatibility. Ventana is probably more of an aquihire to get their designer team.

"We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. Your culture will adapt to service us. Resistance is futile." -Qualcomm, probably

Comment by monocasa 1 day ago

Ventana's cores were 15 instruction wide, massively out of order cores that on paper compete with the application cores in Apple's M series SoCs.

They're a totally different gate count niche than a Cortex-M equivalent.

Comment by drob518 1 day ago

Yea, this to me signals that Qualcomm is starting to hedge its ARM bets. Given all the kerfuffle around licensing they have had with ARM already, I suspect that they are signaling to ARM that they have options and so ARM's leverage is a lot lower than it might be. That said, there are also huge switching costs to Qualcomm's customers, so this is not a move it takes lightly. In the mean time, I'm sure those Ventana engineers can also help them improve their ARM designs, too.

Comment by monocasa 1 day ago

My guess is that this was mostly an acquihire. I had heard that Ventana had a lot of people that were laid off from Intel for instance.

Comment by IshKebab 1 day ago

I would guess the same. Although Android is adding support for RISC-V so I could potentially see them looking into RISC-V Android phones.

Feels kind of unlikely though. Ventana probably ran out of money.

Comment by nrclark 1 day ago

Maybe Ventana's software engineers can also help Qualcomm fix its BSPs.

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I can dream, right?

Comment by nrclark 1 day ago

Fully agree - Ventana's cores are more like Cortex A76 kinds of things, and are on a completely different scale from typical Cortex-M cores.

But switching to RISC-V would shut Qualcomm out from QNX and would limit its Android compatibility. And on the Qualcomm chips that I've seen so far, they're really bought in on both QNX and Android. That's why I think this is probably an aquihire more than a desire to ship Ventana's CPU cores.

Comment by camel-cdr 1 day ago

> Ventana's cores are more like Cortex A76 kinds of things

More like Neoverse-V3: https://www.ventanamicro.com/technology/risc-v-cpu-ip/

BTW: "Silicon platforms launching in early 2026."

I wonder if this will be delayed due to the acquisition.

Comment by snvzz 21 hours ago

Doubtful. To have silicon in early 2026 would mean tapeout happened months ago.

Comment by wbl 1 day ago

Porting QNX would be very possible.

Comment by webdevver 1 day ago

bad, bad, bad sign, when a company starts to penny pinch like that.

but unfortunately very in-line with the thesis that qualcomm is getting squeezed by a commodifying market where value-add opportunity is shifting outside of the SoC platform.

Comment by Joel_Mckay 1 day ago

Could be good if a large firm stabilized the RISC-V version fragmentation with a massive standard SoC product boost in the Android space.

But more likely, the early product line will meet the same fate as the dog in "Old Yeller" (1957) in a market consolidation push. =3

Comment by brucehoult 12 hours ago

What version fragmentation?

Pretty much everything coming out in 2026 -- including Ventana's Veyron V2 -- is RVA23.

One profile to rule them all.

Currently-shipping applications processors are either RVA20 (plus the B extension in practice) or RVA22 with V as a standard option.

That's not fragmentation, it's just a standard linear progression. Each thing can run all the software from the previous thing:

    RVA20 (what e.g. Ubuntu 25.04 and earlier require)
    -> RVA20 + B
    -> RVA22
    -> RVA22 + V
    -> RVA23 (what Ubuntu 25.10 and later require)

Comment by Joel_Mckay 11 hours ago

The exact same mistakes were made in ARM6. RISC-Y biggest competitor is mature architecture ecosystems and variants of itself.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second-system_effect

Even most ARM software compilers still cripple the advanced vendor specific asic features simply for stability mitigation. ARM 8/9 was actually a much leaner design. Cheers =3

https://xkcd.com/927/

Comment by brucehoult 5 hours ago

What mistakes?

No one is ever going to design an ISA that is complete and finished forever on Day #1. There are always going to be new data types and new algorithms to support e.g. the current rush to add "AI" support to all ISAs (NPUs, TPUs, whatever you want to call them).

Arm has ARMv9-A following on from ARMv8-A, and they are already up to Armv9.7-A in addition to as many ARMv8-A enhancements.

Intel/AMD have all kinds of add-ons to x86_64, and not even linear e.g. the here now gone now AVX512. Finally here to stay (presumably) in x86-64-v4. And there is already APX and AVX10 to add to that.

Comment by Joel_Mckay 4 hours ago

If people standardized around something like the RISC-V X280, added some standard license-free hardware codecs, and quietly ejected every other distraction. Than RISC-V may have dropped into mobile SoC markets like amd64 did with x86 hard-to-use failed successor IA-64. Note, the silicon business is about selling sustained volumes of identical product, and not about a CEOs ego selling bespoke chips in sub 100k batches.

There were many great chips that never survived in consumer product spaces. When manufacturers tell chip houses there is a permutation compatibility risk issue, and people take a petulant stance on the feedback... “Not my circus, not my monkeys” as they say.

1. Intel is kept alive by the promise of an integrated NVIDIA RTX SoC.

2. AMD understood something important about the software market, and that was easy backward-compatibility wins over _every_ other feature. Even Intel had to learn this the hard way.

3. 93% of the market is change sensitive... anyone that assumes cross-compiling is on the queue for that sector is greatly mistaken. Note, it took ARM over a decade driven by Googles dominance with mobile to gain traction.

4. Most software libraries will only enable advanced chip features if hardware is detected, and most compiled code simply uses the compatibility subset of compiled features (sure its 3 times slower, but it works everywhere.) No one is going to go through every permutation of an ISA with vendor specific features. The NERF'd subset of features in most Aarch64 and amd64 packages should be enough indication software people won't give a bean about unstable vanity silicon features.

We shall see how RISC-Y plays out in the market. Old Yeller sure looks nervous. =3

Comment by brucehoult 3 hours ago

The X280 is nothing special as a CPU core. It's basically the U74 with added 512 bit vector unit (but only 256 bit ALU), which makes it pretty much equivalent to SpacemiT's X60 core in their K1/M1 SoCs.

There is no X280 hardware available yet for general purchase. There is the HiFive Xara X280 announced in May, but that is believed to be available to SiFive licensees only. The SG2380 was going to have X280s as an NPU alongside P670 main cores, but that's been cancelled as a result of US sanctions on Sophgo. The PIC64-HSPC is a rad-hard chip using the X280 for NASA and other space customers, but will not be cheap -- the RAD750 PowerPC chip it is replacing reportedly costs $200,000 each.

Comment by nrclark 1 day ago

I'd be surprised if Qualcomm replaces their application processors (the cores that typically run Android/Linux or QNX) with RISC-V any time soon. Aarch64's ecosystem is huge, and Qualcomm would cut their customers off from it by moving fully to RISC-V.

They're more likely to replace the smaller CPU cores imo.

Comment by brucehoult 12 hours ago

> Aarch64's ecosystem is huge

ARMv8 hardware (other than Apple) only shipped 3-6 years before RV64GC/RVA20, and ARMv9 is only about two years before the equivalent RVA23 -- at least in SBCs/Laptops. Obviously ARMv8 hardware went into mobile devices a lot earlier, though it was often running 32 bit code for the first few years.

It's nothing at all like the maturity lead x86 has over both.

Comment by Joel_Mckay 1 day ago

Agreed, at $5/pc for a ARM64 7/8/9 SoC that can run a real OS, the Aarch64 is likely the minimum now for most designs. =3

Comment by Zhyl 1 day ago

It may be a while off yet, but it's pretty clear that companies, Qualcomm chief among them, are ready to replace arm as soon as possible.

Comment by rwmj 1 day ago

If it happens, Arm will have only themselves to blame. Suing your own customers is not the smartest move.

Comment by drtgh 23 hours ago

Qualcomm acquired Nuvia in order to bypass the licence fees charged by ARM, with I can guess ARM tried to block in good terms first, and latter in bad terms without success as we saw. It may make sense now that ARM is refusing to license them the newer ones.

Qualcomm may be solely to blame themselves, as they now has to invest in researching and developing an underdeveloped architecture, quickly, while their competitors -including Chinese ones- take advantage with newer ARM designs (and perhaps they could even develop their own alternatives peacefully in the meantime).

Comment by Moral_ 1 day ago

Now they're getting counter sued by Qualcomm because it turns out they allegedly violated their own TLA (license to get off the shelf cores) and their ALA (architecture license).

Qualcomm is claiming that Arm is refusing to license the v10 architecture to them and refused to license some other TLA cores requiring them to get the Nuvia Custom CPU team to build cores for those products instead.

This explains their expansion into Risc-V it's a hedge against Arm interfering with QC's business.

Comment by bitwize 1 day ago

It'll turn out OK. They'll just be acquired by Apple, who will continue putting out the most powerful CPUs on the market with AArch64 architecture.

Comment by Pet_Ant 1 day ago

Why does Qualcomm need this? They don't need to license RISC-V.

Is all the IP they acquired with Nuvia[1] tainted? Or were they just using ARM-derived internals?

From my understanding, just slapping on a different instruction decoder isn't a big technical hurdle. Actually, I wonder if it would be possible to design a chip with both an ARM and a RISC-V decoder on the same die and just fuse-off the ARM die on select units to avoid any fees...

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qualcomm#2015%E2%80%932024:_NX...

Comment by tapoxi 1 day ago

ARM cancelled their architecture license and sued them, Qualcomm won, but with a threat like that to your core business it's best to have an escape hatch.

They'll need to license future versions of the ARM ISA and now they know the licensor is hostile.

Comment by 6SixTy 1 day ago

They are basically acquiring talent and/or preexisting IP. RISC-V is free but implementations are the sole IP of the company.

Implementing ARM and RISC-V decoders might depend on licensing fine print for each licensee

Comment by Zhyl 1 day ago

This. SiFive, for example, is a proprietory core design based on the open source RISC V spec. Hazard3 [0] on the other hand, is an open source core design.

[0] https://github.com/Wren6991/Hazard3

Comment by jrepinc 1 day ago

Another opensource core design is XiangShan https://xiangshan.cc/en/

Comment by disdi 1 day ago

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Comment by tux3 1 day ago

Eating the competitor is one way to win. If you're scared of them, just buy them out.

Comment by observationist 1 day ago

Doesn't have to be fear, it can be simple greed, too. "Hey, look, .05% revenue boost, nomnomnom".

Comment by NordSteve 1 day ago

No big company would bother with an acquisition if the top result is 0.05% increase in revenue.

Comment by MisterTea 1 day ago

> They don't need to license RISC-V.

Correct. However you need circuitry on silicon to implement said architecture which is the expensive and time consuming part.

Comment by Zigurd 1 day ago

There are a lot of little cores in phones doing little core things. Having a first rate design team experienced in an ISA that is royalty free probably makes sense. They'll be able to expand the use of RISCV up the value chain ver time.

Buying a team that's already working on RISCV also reduces the chances of ARM lawyers getting involved.

Comment by panick21_ 1 day ago

Why would you acquire massive out-of-order super fast CPU team if you wanted a bunch of small cores. There are much cheaper teams and cores you could use for that.

Comment by Zigurd 17 hours ago

Some modems and radios need more than reference-implementation performance and everything in a phone benefits from power efficiency.

Comment by panick21_ 12 hours ago

Sure but there are teams that work on radios and modems that likely could be acquired and not sure Qualcomm needs that. RISC-V isn't so different that you need to acquire a team.

Ventana is a company founded and build around a team to do massive ultra wide chips for data-center, and their focus was not efficiency primary. The kinds of chips they build are just not the right fit. Moving all that team over to something on the literal other end of the spectrum and dropping their existing products and costumers seems a bit silly.

Comment by fidotron 1 day ago

https://patents.justia.com/assignee/ventana-micro-systems-in...

RISC-V being freely available does not mean that implementations of it will not be patented from here to the Orion nebula and back.

Comment by jsheard 1 day ago

> Actually, I wonder if it would be possible to design a chip with both an ARM and a RISC-V decoder on the same die and just fuse-off the ARM die on select units to avoid any fees...

That's not quite what Raspberry Pi did with the RP2350 (the ARM and RV cores are wholly separate) but they did include the ability to fuse off one side or the other, so I wonder if they'll release a cheaper RV-only version at some point.

Comment by aseipp 1 day ago

It's probably just for IP and talent acquisition, if I had to guess. People who can design high performance server-class CPU microarchitectures are rare.

Frankly, Ventana seemed like an interesting entry in the space, but I have no idea who would have actually bought their servers at the end of the day. They taped out multiple designs, but none actually seem to exist outside their labs. I don't really see any path to meaningful RISC-V server adoption for at least several more years and by that time Qualcomm could design something on their own, assuming they are serious about re-entering the market. Grabbing the talent and any useful IP/core design components makes the most sense to me, anyway.

Comment by fork-bomber 1 day ago

QC likely use a lot of Arm IP, Nuvia notwithstanding, and want a way out of the general Arm monopoly. Seems to be a growing trend.

A dual ISA decoder with with fuse-off options will likely have unwelcome power-perf-area and yield consequences.

Comment by Pet_Ant 1 day ago

Fused off silicon consumes power? I assumed it just went dark.

Comment by fork-bomber 1 day ago

You’re right. But consider that in order to be useful when not fused off, the design would need to have a bunch of additional logic (interconnect ports, power control machinery etc) at the periphery of the to-eventually-be-fused-off area that would likely remain even when things were fused off. That may impact power.

Apart from that there’s the other usual angles: The very fact that there’s additional logic in the compute path (eventually fused off) means additional design and verification complexity. The additional area, although dark, eats into the silicon yield at the fab.

Not saying it’s not possible.

Comment by dismalaf 1 day ago

Acquihire and hedging bets.

Comment by boredatoms 1 day ago

I wonder why SiFive wasn't the acquisition target

Comment by rwmj 1 day ago

SiFive have apparently been shopping themselves around for a while. But they've been around for a long time, taken loads of investment, had a huge number of employees at one point (not now), and don't have very competitive products. My speculation is they're just not a very attractive acquisition with a complex ownership structure, and are demanding too much money to compensate their earlier investors.

Comment by pieter3d 1 day ago

A perfect target for Intel then, followed by a rapid exodus of the employees and destruction of the IP (like every other Intel acquisition).

Comment by monocasa 1 day ago

They almost got bought by Intel, but then even Intel noped out.

https://www.tomshardware.com/news/intel-failed-to-buy-sifive

Comment by tonetegeatinst 1 day ago

Does anyone know or have they leaked potential cost of acquisition?

Comment by monocasa 1 day ago

The $2B deal with Intel fell through. Thought they were arguably worth more on paper then. My guess is that they're in a weird place where a fair offer at the moment is less than the investment they've gotten so far.

Comment by phendrenad2 1 day ago

Note that the $2 billion deal story was always "according to people with knowledge of the matter", and I wonder if it was nothing more than Intel taking a peek at Sifive's technology and books.

https://archive.is/FVMLI#selection-3331.81-3331.129

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Comment by ch_123 1 day ago

Might be worth more than Qualcomm is willing to spend and/or introduce antitrust concerns. This feels like a hedging of bets, no need for Qualcomm to buy the biggest name in the RISC-V space.

Comment by IshKebab 1 day ago

SiFive have had a very long time to create competitive CPUs and they haven't really managed it. I dunno what's going on there but I'm not sure I'd buy them either.

Comment by snvzz 1 day ago

Their P870-D looks plenty competitive.

What they might have issues with is finding clients to license it to.

Comment by phendrenad2 1 day ago

Is this just Qualcomm buying itself another vote on the RISC-V foundation board?

Comment by thebeardisred 1 day ago

No, it's one company == one vote. There's a similar situation with IBM & Red Hat. Since IBM owns Red Hat, Red Hatters (like myself) may participate in meetings but where individuals from both companies are present "there can be only one."

Comment by wslh 1 day ago

2025 and counting. Apple launched the M1 in 2020. I am an Apple user but not a fanboy but everyday I wonder about the magic in Apple that is unique because even established competitors with virtually infinite money and incredible processes can't move forward. Another incredible aspect is the early addition of an NPU by Apple in a SoC.

I would love to resurrect my XPS 13s with a durable battery and working in Linux without trigerring the fan. The same for my Lenovo Xs.

In my imagination I am waiting for the billionaire geeks doing their part for fun (e.g. energy management in Linux).

Comment by baq 1 day ago

> Apple launched the M1 in 2020.

which means the M1 was being worked on since at least 2018, I'd bet much earlier than that, for sure much earlier than that if you count silicon which never left the lab.

reminder iphones run on apple silicon since 2010, which means they had to be working on it at least since 2008. they have a lot of experience in silicon design by now.

Comment by wslh 1 day ago

My point holds even if they started earlier, companies such as Samsung has their own chips and they could also put notebooks on the market.

Comment by bigyabai 1 day ago

Why would Samsung do that? They have no sweetheart ARM licensing deal, they make more money selling their fab space to other customers.

Softbank could extend more generous architectural licenses to these businesses if they wanted to stimulate ARM PC sales. But they don't, so now we're here.

Comment by verditelabs 1 day ago

Qualcomm has had DSPs in its chips for a long time, providing a lot of NPU-like functionality before the term NPU had been coined. What Qualcomm currently calls its NPUs are just Hexagon DSP cores with specific instructions and abilities for matrix math and common inferencing datatypes.

Comment by eigenspace 1 day ago

The original Apple M1's performance per Watt and physical battery size may have been special when it first came out, but nowadays there's nothing special about its hardware specs relative to a modern x86 laptop.

The difference you perceive is mostly software. Windows and Linux are really just designed for desktop machines first and foremost. MacOS was too, but when they transitioned to Apple Silicon, they replaced a lot of the internals with stuff taken from iOS, and iOS is designed with batter life first and foremost.

Getting the level of battery life out of non-apple laptops is just going to be a long, hard slog of going through the operating systems and auditing *everything* and every design decision for how it affects battery life and how much resources its using.

Comment by MobiusHorizons 1 day ago

Interesting, I thought Apple Silicon was still ahead on raw numbers, would you mind pointing me at any resources to learn more?

Is that still true when you consider the whole system power consumption vs performance? I was under the impression that Apple's ram and storage solutions give them a small edge here (at the cost of upgradability / repairability)

Comment by eigenspace 1 day ago

Apple Silicon has a lead in performance per watt over the competition (not a gigantic one, but a real one nontheless), but we were talking about M1, which is 5 years old now and has no appreciable hardware advantages compared to an AMD or Intel laptop made in the last few years.

The reason an old M1 laptop gets better battery life is almost entirely a software difference.

Comment by bigyabai 1 day ago

"raw numbers" always means a lot of things. Apple's CPU benchmarks are neck-and-neck in multicore and usually top-of-class in single-core performance compared to other desktop chips. x86 will draw more power when idling and during bursty workloads, but is typically more efficient during sustained SIMD-style workloads.

If you want an example of where Apple's design chops are pretty weak, look at their GPUs: https://browser.geekbench.com/opencl-benchmarks

The M3 Ultra is putting up some of the saddest OpenCL benches I've ever seen from a 200-300w GPU. The entry-level RTX 5060 Ti runs circles around it with a $400 MSRP and 180w TDP. I truly feel bad for anyone that bought a Mac Studio for AI inference.

Comment by bigyabai 1 day ago

> Another incredible aspect is the early addition of an NPU by Apple in a SoC.

I'm going to go out on a limb and guess that you've not used CUDA yet. NPUs are a lot of things, but "incredible" is the last word an engineer would use to describe them these days.

Comment by wslh 1 day ago

Incredible means they follow a SoC approach where the RAM is shared between CPU, GPU, and NPU instead of separated like in a typical GPU such as Nvidia.

Comment by bigyabai 1 day ago

I consider the Tegra chip several times more incredible. What's so special about Apple's architecture to you?

Comment by wslh 1 day ago

Tegra was interesting for its time but saying it’s “several times more incredible” than Apple’s architecture is just opinion. Apple builds custom high-performance CPU/GPU designs with industry-leading perf-per-watt and tight OS integration. Tegra and Apple SoCs were built for very different goals, so the comparison only makes sense with concrete metrics, not broad claims.

Comment by throwaway31131 1 day ago

Comment by monocasa 1 day ago

I imagine this is mostly an acquihire to bolster the same teams that the Nuvia acquisition did.

Comment by Moral_ 1 day ago

What are you talking about Qualcomm is shipping cores from the Nuvia team they acquired for 2 years now.