Cecil H. Green
Co-Founder
Texas Instruments designs and manufactures analog and embedded processing semiconductors used in industrial, automotive, personal electronics, communications equipment, and enterprise systems. The company operates its own wafer fabs and assembly/test sites, and ships chips to more than 100,000 customers worldwide.
Texas Instruments designs and manufactures analog and embedded processing semiconductors used in industrial, automotive, personal electronics, communications equipment, and enterprise systems. The company operates its own wafer fabs and assembly/test sites, and ships chips to more than 100,000 customers worldwide.
Texas Instruments traces its roots to Geophysical Service Inc., founded in 1930 by J. Clarence Karcher and Eugene McDermott to provide seismic exploration to the petroleum industry. In 1941 McDermott, J. Erik Jonsson, Cecil H. Green and H. B. Peacock acquired GSI; in 1951, with Patrick E. Haggerty joining the founding group, the company was renamed Texas Instruments and pivoted toward electronics and semiconductors.
TI elected President and CEO Haviv Ilan as chairman effective January 2026, succeeding Rich Templeton who is retiring at the end of 2025.
Third quarter 2025 results showed revenue of $4.74 billion, continuing a sequential growth trend through the year.
TI's expanded 300mm analog and embedded fab capacity will supply chips to customers including Apple, Ford, Medtronic, Nvidia, and SpaceX, with the company also receiving up to $1.6B in CHIPS Act funding.
Texas Instruments unveiled plans to build and expand fabs in Sherman and Richardson, Texas, and Lehi, Utah. The Sherman site will receive up to $40B; the company called it the largest investment in foundational semiconductor manufacturing in US history.
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