Sigma Designs is no more

This acquisition sort of reminds me of the Home Automation Inc (HAI) acquisition by Leviton in August 2012. Back then there were a number of articles, press releases etc. indicating that the acquisition would greatly benefit HAI since Leviton had a lot of cash for HAI R&D.  This investment by Leviton would keep HAI at the forefront of home automation/security. 
 
Well, I personally haven't seen any real technological advances for HAI in the 5 plus years since the acquisition.  The product line appears to be stagnant.  Also, a lot of 5 star dealers became disillusioned with the acquisition.  Prior to the acquisition, there were six 5 star dealers in a 50 mile radius of my rural Northeast PA home.  Today  there are no dealers in that radius.  The only thing Leviton did was to raise the price of the product line about 5% a year after the acquisition.
 
IMHO, Sigma zwave will just become another product offering that will blend in with the complete SilLabs product offering whereas zwave was the  core product of Sigma.  It was the "bread and butter" of Sigma.
 
I really don't think this acquisition will be of any major benefit to the consumers.  But anyway, here is a CEPro link that does contradict my opinion.  https://www.cepro.com/article/top_10_reasons_sigma_acquisition_by_silicon_labs_is_awesome_for_z_wave
 
 
So when Sigma Designs owned Z-Wave, and the Z-Wave business was about 85% of Sigma Design's revenue, it was an OK business for Sigma Designs, but never one that was that profitable, so obviously Sigma Designs thought this was a good time to sell.  Silicon Labs is not a company that wants to acquire Sigma Designs just to keep running it like Sigma Designs ran it.   That just wouldn't make sense.  So what does Silicon Labs plan to do?  The company is big on the IoT and already is a big supporter of Zigbee.  But Zigbee being an open IEEE standard can be developed by many companies.  Sigma Designs owns the Z-Wave standard and can license its use.
 
So Silicon Labs is "saying" they will add the Z-Wave protocol to their repertoire, and possibly make devices that support combo Z-Wave and Zigbee.  This could entirely be true, and maybe Silicon Labs sees a way to increase the market Sigma Designs had to grow the market.  That might even be "plan A" but if that doesn't go well, I believe there is a "plan B" which could be their plan all along, maybe. And plan B would be to use their position with Z-Wave to migrate users to Zigbee. 
 
So how? Maybe they could support the market with Z-Wave/Zigbee combo devices, then 5 years down the line just say they are going to phase-out Z-Wave and then they have a big chunk of the market.  Like I say, this may not be their initial main plan, but I'm sure its one of their backups.
 
I'm not a fortune teller, but if I was going to invest a bunch in Z-Wave this next year or two, maybe it would be best to wait for the combo Zigbee/Z-Wave devices to come out.  The good news then is your not tied to either.  I also think it will be quite easy for Silicon Labs to make these dual chips. We'll see.
 
BobS0327 said:
This acquisition sort of reminds me of the Home Automation Inc (HAI) acquisition by Leviton in August 2012. Back then there were a number of articles, press releases etc. indicating that the acquisition would greatly benefit HAI since Leviton had a lot of cash for HAI R&D.  This investment by Leviton would keep HAI at the forefront of home automation/security.
Similar but not fully. Certainly HAI wanted to sell, but I think they believed they would work together with Leviton to create an OmniPro III.  Maybe they still will, but maybe they decided not to as well. The thing here is HAI wasn't going to produce an OP III otherwise.  But you are 100% correct, that Leviton used HAI to acquire customers, like Silicon Labs is doing.
 
But Silicon Labs has a good ZigBee business going without Sigma Labs, where Leviton didn't have much in the way of Home Automation before HAI.  I guess when you consider that, Z-Wave is probably more doomed than the OmniPro II is. But hope for the best, and prepare for the worst. :wacko:
 
There have been other products at Leviton like the new Decora Smart line of dimmers.  I just don't know if those were developed by the LS&A group (old HAI) or if it's someone else.
 
It's kind of telling they haven't even released a firmware upgrade to the OPII to control their new Wi-Fi dimmers.
 
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