The initial product was a floating-point co-processor chipset. Later, the company produced the B5000 SPARC ECL microprocessor (never reached production in a Sun Microsystems product, though used by Floating Point Systems).[8] They also produced the R6000MIPS ECL microprocessor, which did reach production as a MIPS minicomputer.[9] Initial yields of the R6000 were very poor, leading to parts shortages for MIPS Computer Systems; the latter company attributed their first quarterly loss in October 1990 to BIT.[10] The two signed an agreement in June 1991 to allow BIT to market the R6000 on the open market, dissolving the previous exclusivity agreement with MIPS.[11]
Under its new president Fred Hanson, BIT had its first profitable year in 1991,[11] reaching peak revenues of $20 million. Revenues dropped the following year to about $10 million, however, after it had lost four of its largest customers, including MIPS, Floating Point, and Control Data.[12] The company eventually entered the telecommunications market with Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) devices and Ethernet switches. The company was acquired by PMC-Sierra in September 1996 for these later communications products.[1][13]
^ abcStaff writer (September 9, 1996). "Sierra purchases Bit". Electronic News. 42 (2133). International Publishing Corporation: 2 – via ProQuest.
^Agrawal, Anant; Emil W. Brown; Dave Murata; Joseph Petolino (2012). "Bipolar ECL Implementation of SPARC". In Ben J. Catanzaro (ed.). The SPARC Technical Papers. Springer New York. pp. 201–211. ISBN9781461231929 – via Google Books.