QuickLogic Corporation Appoints Joyce Kim to Its Board of Directors
December 08, 2021 at 08:12 am EST
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QuickLogic Corporation announced that Joyce Kim has been appointed to QuickLogic's Board of Directors, effective immediately. Kim brings extensive go-to-market expertise including digital, brand, communications, and product marketing within the technology sector, including cloud, microprocessors, real-time communications, AI, IoT and more for global hardware, semiconductor intellectual property (IP) and SaaS organizations. Kim currently serves as the Chief Marketing Officer at Genesys where she is responsible for the company's global marketing and communications strategy. Prior to joining Genesys, Kim served as the Chief Marketing and Digital Officer at Arm, Chief Marketing Officer at Wrike, Product Marketing Leader for Skype, and Skype for Business at Microsoft, and Head of Product Communications & Partner Relations at Google. Kim brings over 20 years of marketing and brand experience within the technology sector, scaling commercial innovation through large-scale digital transformation and brand elevation. She earned a double major from California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo with Bachelor of Science degrees in Finance and Architecture.
QuickLogic Corporation is a semiconductor company that develops embedded FPGA (eFPGA) intellectual property (IP), discrete FPGAs, and FPGA system-on-chips (SoCs) for a variety of industrial, aerospace and defense, edge and endpoint artificial intelligence (AI), consumer, and computing applications. Its products include eFPGA IP Licensing business, associated professional services, consisting of development and integration of eFPGA technology into custom semiconductor solutions, its silicon products consisting of EOS, QuickAI, ArcticLink III, PolarPro3, PolarPro II, PolarPro, and Eclipse II products. Its new products category includes its AI/ML Software Platform from its subsidiary company, SensiML, which includes Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) subscriptions for development, per unit license fees when deployed in production, and proof-of-concept services. Its mature products include primarily FPGA families named PASIC3 and QuickRAM, as well as programming hardware and design software.