Lime Microsystems wins British Engineering Excellence Small Company of the Year Award, 2014 

Lime Microsystems CEO Ebrahim Bushehri accepts the award.

15 October 2014, London, UK: The field programmable RF chip developer Lime Microsystems has won a coveted British Engineering Excellence Award (BEEA).

The winners were revealed at a lunch event held at 8 Northumberland Avenue, London on 9 October. Lime was awarded Small Company of the Year, sponsored by D Young and Co LLP.

The judges said of Lime, “With much of UK engineering consisting of smaller companies, it was no surprise that this proved a keenly-fought sector. The judges were delighted to note that this key sector was still producing highly innovative and successful companies.

“This year’s Small Company of the Year is Lime Microsystems, which specialises in field programmable RF transceivers for the next generation of wireless broadband systems. The judges were keen to reward the fact that Lime Microsystems has not only pioneered RF technology, but has also promoted open systems in the sector.”

The judges also noted Lime Microsystems’ remarkable growth and commended its plan to achieve more.

Lime CEO Ebrahim Bushehri, said: “We are delighted to receive this award. We were up against some impressive competition and are proud that Lime Microsystems and the field of FPRF are being recognised by the industry.”

The British Engineering Excellence Awards (BEEAs) aim to demonstrate and promote the quality of engineering design within the UK; to emphasise innovation and effectiveness in order to allow smaller companies to compete on an equal footing with larger ones; to act as an incentive to the design engineering industry to create world-class businesses; to provide a benchmark of excellence from which the industry can learn and from which it can build; and to demonstrate the power of engineering design innovation within the UK to the world.

About Lime Microsystems

Lime Microsystems is the world’s leading designer and manufacturer of field programmable RF transceivers.

The company’s software configurable chips can run any mobile standard and any mobile frequency and have been used in a vast array of systems including mobile base stations and small cells, SDR platforms, indoor navigation and machine-to-machine communication systems.

Further information is available at www.limemicro.com.