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November 18, 2020 | Alumni

LegUp Computing, a U of T Engineering startup, acquired by U.S.-based Microchip Technology

By Matthew Tierney

Andrew Canis smiles as he holds up a computer circuit board.

Andrew Canis (PhD 2015), a U of T alumnus and LegUp co-founder, demonstrates the company's technology at U of T's True Blue Expo in 2019 (photo courtesy of LegUp)


LegUp Computing Inc., a startup with origins in the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering has been acquired by U.S.-based Microchip Technology Inc.

Leveraging technology originally developed at the labs of Professors Jason Anderson (MASc 1997, PhD 2005) and Stephen Brown (MASc 1987, PhD 1992) in the the Edward S. Rogers Sr. department of electrical and computer engineering (ECE), LegUp Computing was co-founded in 2015 by Anderson and alumni Andrew Canis (PhD 2015)Jongsok Choi (MASc 2012, PhD 2016) and Ruolong Lian (BASc 2013, MASc 2016).

LegUp, which received support from U of T’s UTEST accelerator and once worked out of a deconsecrated church on the St. George campus, built a high-level synthesis tool that makes the design of field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) much easier. FPGAs usually require hardware design skills, but LegUp’s tool allows programmers to write software that can be converted automatically into a hardware circuit.

The acquisition moves Microchip’s platform in line with their two biggest competitors, Xilinx and Intel, who have their own high-level synthesis tools.

“It’s very gratifying that the LegUp tool will be used by so many engineers”

Anderson is pleased that the LegUp team will stay together.

“The last five years has seen us develop such a great working relationship,” he says. “The culture fit is very good with Microchip. It’s also very gratifying that the LegUp tool will be used by so many engineers.”

“The success of Professor Anderson’s research-based startup is an indication of the importance of entrepreneurship within ECE as an accelerator of innovation and impact,” adds Professor Deepa Kundur (BASc 1993, MASc 1995, PhD 1999), chair of the Edward S. Rogers Sr. department of electrical and computer engineering.

Microchip’s Bruce Weyer, vice-president of the FPGA business unit, cites LegUp’s deep experience in high-level synthesis and related technologies as a huge plus for the Microchip client community. He says they will quickly see the benefits of the easy-to-use technology.

Microchip plans to fully integrate the LegUp tool into its platform by mid-2021.

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