The next generation of engineers has entered the building. Welcome to our 2026 North America intern class! We are looking forward to a summer of hands-on learning, real-world engineering challenges, and meaningful career development alongside this impressive group of young professionals.
Analog Devices
Semiconductor Manufacturing
Wilmington, MA 532,543 followers
Global semiconductor leader that bridges the physical and digital worlds to enable breakthroughs at the Intelligent Edge
About us
Analog Devices, Inc. (NASDAQ: ADI) is a global semiconductor leader that bridges the physical and digital worlds to enable breakthroughs at the Intelligent Edge. ADI combines analog, digital, AI, and software technologies into solutions that help drive advancements in automation and robotics, mobility, energy and data centers, and healthcare, combat climate change, and reliably connect humans and the world. With revenue of more than $11 billion in FY25, ADI ensures today's innovators stay Ahead of What's Possible. Learn more at www.analog.com and on LinkedIn and X (formerly Twitter).
- Website
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http://www.analog.com
External link for Analog Devices
- Industry
- Semiconductor Manufacturing
- Company size
- 10,001+ employees
- Headquarters
- Wilmington, MA
- Type
- Public Company
- Specialties
- semiconductors, analog, mixed-signal and signal processing, and digital signal processing
Locations
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Primary
Get directions
One Analog Way
Wilmington, MA 01887, US
Employees at Analog Devices
Updates
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The gap between energy stored and energy delivered is one of the defining challenges for grid-scale storage. Rimac Energy and ADI have teamed up to help close it by combining ADI's precision sensing and battery management system technologies with Rimac Energy's distributed embedded inverter architecture to unlock more usable energy from the same installed capacity. The result? More value from every cell, at every stage of its life. Learn more: https://lnkd.in/eHGG-gMq
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As the complexity of industrial automation increases, functional safety becomes a key component in chip manufacturing. Part 5 of our Functional Safety series explores how supervisory circuits, like voltage monitors and watchdog timers, help manufacturers to detect faults earlier and support aligning to IEC 61508 compliance. Discover how: https://bit.ly/4uinUIZ
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From autonomous machines to industrial robotics, the technologies of the future demand precision sensing they can count on. The ADIS16607 inertial measurement unit delivers robust and scalable sensing to propel the next wave of innovations in automation. Fully calibrated and built for the most demanding environments, our newest portfolio addition brings connectorized-module-performance to space and weight constrained applications. Learn more: https://bit.ly/4tM26nS
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Analog Devices reports fiscal second quarter 2026 financial results with revenue of $3.62 billion. Find the full announcement here: https://bit.ly/43j7eVM
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Analog Devices and Empower Semiconductor today announced that they have entered into a definitive agreement under which ADI will acquire Empower, expanding its next-generation high-density power portfolio for the AI era. Building on its leadership in high-performance power management, ADI is investing in its system-level platform to deliver a step-change in performance, density, and efficiency from grid to core. Find the full announcement here: https://bit.ly/4wJA8w0
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Explore the future of RF and microwave innovation with us during #IMS2026. We'll be in our hometown of Boston all week, showing you how we're unlocking physical intelligence across increasingly complex RF environments. Hear from our experts on topics like software defined radios and beamforming technology advancements – then see our latest innovations in action through live demos, including Apollo MxFE and much more. Preview #ADIatIMS today: https://bit.ly/4tU09WU
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Speed is no longer just an operational target. In the software-defined vehicle era, it is an architectural outcome. That was a key theme from Yasmine King’s fireside chat at the FT Live Future of the Car Summit 2026. OEMs are under pressure to deliver innovation faster, while managing recall exposure, warranty costs, regulatory divergence, and supply chain volatility. The differentiator is no longer who reaches the start of production first, but who can sustain speed safely across the full vehicle lifecycle. That requires a different foundation—one built on architectures that reduce integration friction, enable predictable insights, and allow hardware and software to evolve in parallel. As Yasmine noted, "the most successful companies are intentional about architecture from day one. Visibility, diagnostics, and insights can no longer be treated as add-ons at the end." Predictive insight and system-level trust are accelerators, not constraints. When systems are designed to provide greater visibility from the start, teams can reduce uncertainty, make decisions faster, and continue evolving with confidence.
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