ATLANTA — UP Media Group Inc.
today announced that the 14th annual PCB Design Conference West 2005
provided
over 55 industry-leading exhibitors with a targeted audience of
approximately 1,400 attendees.
The audience included corporate executives,
purchasing/procurement executives, design engineers and managers,
process engineers, PCB layout designers and others, who came to the
March 7-11 event, held at the Santa Clara (CA) Convention Center.
PCB Design Conference West is North
America's largest annual design-oriented conference and exhibition for
printed circuit board engineering, design and manufacture. This year's
Silicon Valley-based venue provided attendees with an excellent setting
for instruction, networking and face-to-face marketing opportunities.
The show received positive feedback from attendees and exhibitors.
"We are still on a high from PCB
West 2005. It was a great two-day exhibition for us," said Randy Eager,
CEO and cofounder of DesignAdvance Systems Inc. "We demonstrated our
new user-assisted component placement product, and we were thrilled to
generate a great deal of attendee interest and to capture many highly
qualified leads."
"It was exciting to bring PCB West
back to the Santa Clara Convention Center again after two years in San
Jose," said UP Media Group President Pete Waddell. "Our attendees find
the Santa Clara facility to be a convenient, central Silicon Valley
location, and they like the free parking. This year's conference
program was first-rate—over 35 technical courses focusing on today's
toughest design challenges. And our two-day exhibition was equally
successful, resulting in an excellent re-sign rate for PCB West 2006."
In addition to the exhibition and
conference, several special events were well attended and received
praise from those who participated. These include the PCB Technology
Forum and Welcome Luncheon, the keynote address by Bartlett
Manufacturing president Doug Bartlett on "The Future of the North
American PCB Industry," the Opening Night Reception and Grand Giveaway
of exhibitor-sponsored prizes valued at $200 or more, the French
Quarter Masquerade Party, the PCB Top Gun competition and the PCB
Design Peer Awards competition.
Several exhibitors announced or
demonstrated new products and services at PCB West 2005. Those products
and services are detailed in a press release posted in the "What's New"
section on the www.pcbwest.com home page.
Dates for the 15th annual PCB West
2006 have been announced: March 27-31 at the Santa Clara Convention
Center in Santa Clara, CA. For more information, visit www.pcbwest.com.
UPMG's next trade show is the 10th
annual PCB Design Conference East 2005, which will be held October
10-14 at the Expo Center of New Hampshire in Manchester, NH. For more
information, visit www.pcbeast.com.
SAN JOSE — Despite persistent excess inventory
concerns, the worldwide semiconductor industry grew 23.4% in 2004, to $219.9 billion, according to research firm
Gartner Inc.
"The commodity memory business — dominated by DRAM and NAND flash — was
the one device sector immune from soft supply conditions in 2004," said
Jeremey Donovan, vice president for Gartner's worldwide semiconductor
group. "In terms of vertical markets, wireless and digital consumer
electronics were star performers once again."
Intel remained the No. 1 vendor based on worldwide semiconductor
revenue for the 13th consecutive year. Intel continued a
highly visible push into new markets, most notably into digital
cellular and wireless LAN ICs.
SAN JOSE -- North American-based manufacturers of semiconductor equipment posted $1.03 billion in orders in February, according to SEMI. The 90-day moving book-to-bill ratio was 0.78.
A book-to-bill of 0.78 means that $78 worth of orders were received for every $100 of product billed for the month.
The three-month average of worldwide bookings in February was $1.03
billion. Bookings were up 4% over revised January of $990 million and
22% below February.
The three-month average of worldwide billings in February was $1.32
billion. Billings were 5% above the revised January figure of $1.26
billion and 15% above February 2004.
"Current three-month average bookings are at a level observed in late
2003," said Dan P. Tracy, senior director of SEMI Industry Research
& Statistics. "Given the 300-mm investment and ramp underway
worldwide, the expectation remains for a much more moderated equipment
cycle in 2005 compared to the 2001/2002 time frame."
OYSTER BAY, NY -- And you thought your city has the worst drivers.
Ten percent of all traffic fatalities
in the U.S. are pedestrians. In Europe, the figure is 20%, and in
Japan, 30%. Legislation soon to be enacted in Europe and Japan will
require that measures to protect pedestrians be introduced to
automobiles starting late in 2005.
According to a new study from research firm ABI Research, the maturing of object detection
algorithms in driver safety systems -- technologies such as Lane
Departure Warning, ACC and Pre-Crash -- may provide the biggest push to
this market's growth.
First generation pedestrian safety systems will be "reactive" types,
says senior analyst Robert LaGuerra. These systems typically have
sensors mounted in the bumper and "react" when there is an impact.
SAN JOSE - The coming
transition to nano-scale semiconductor devices means that leadership in
information technology is up for grabs, warned the Semiconductor
Industry Association.
At a news conference in Washington, D.C., this month, chief executives of
U.S. semiconductor makers and a leading economist stressed the
importance of continued progress and leadership in semiconductor
technology. The industry is observing the 40th anniversary of Moore's
Law - an observation made in 1965 by industry pioneer Gordon Moore that
the number of components on a computer chip was doubling approximately
every 12 months with a commensurate reduction in costs. Following the
vision of Moore's Law, the U.S. semiconductor industry has led the
worldwide industry, contributing key innovations that have helped drive
America's economic growth.
Speaking at the news conference were Steve Appleton, chief
executive of Micron Technology and 2005 chairman of the SIA;
Craig Barrett, chief executive of Intel; Dale
Jorgenson, Harvard University;
and George Scalise, president of the SIA. The industry executives noted
that four decades of continuous advances in microchip technology have
led to creation of entirely new industries, including personal
computers, the Internet, and cellular telephones, while enabling major
advances in biotechnology, medicine, and environmental protection.Jorgenson discussed the contributions semiconductors have
made to economic growth and productivity gains during the past decade.
SIA called for stepped up support for basic research in the
physical sciences to assure continued U.S. technology leadership.
Experts believe current semiconductor technology could run up against
physical, technological and economic limits around 2020.
"U.S. leadership in technology is under assault," said Barrett.
"The challenge we face is global in nature and broader in scope than
any we have faced in the past. The initial step in responding to this
challenge is that America must decide to compete. If we don't compete
and win, there will be very serious consequences for our standard of
living and national security in the future."
Barrett said that industry scientists believe current CMOS
scaling to support Moore's Law can remain in effect for at least
another 10 to 15 years. When the smallest features on a chip shrink to
less than 10 nanometers - 10 one-billionths of a meter - current
chipmaking technology will reach its ultimate limits. To keep Moore's
Law alive, the industry will have to leave Newtonian physics behind and
transition to the realm of quantum physics - the era of nanotechnology.
"U.S. leadership in the nanoelectronics era is not guaranteed,"
noted Barrett. "It will take a massive, coordinated U.S. research
effort involving academia, industry, and state and federal governments
to ensure that America continues to be the world leader in information
technology."
Semiconductor technology vital to U.S. economy
Sustaining continuous advances in semiconductor technology is vital
to sustaining improved U.S. economic performance, according to one of
the nation's leading economists, Professor Dale Jorgenson. "The mantra
of the ‘new economy' - faster, better, cheaper - characterizes the
speed of technological change and product improvement in
semiconductors, the key enabling technology," said Jorgenson.
"Development and deployment of information technology is the foundation
of the American growth resurgence that has occurred since 1995."
"The economics of information technology begins with the
precipitous and continuing fall in semiconductor prices," Jorgenson
continued. "The rapid price decline has been transmitted to the prices
of a range of products that rely heavily on this technology, like
computers and telecommunications equipment." Jorgenson noted that
swiftly falling prices for information technology equipment have
provided powerful economic incentives for rapid diffusion of
information technology, which in turn has led to accelerated economic
growth and strong increases in productivity.
"The four IT-producing industries - semiconductors, computers,
communications equipment, and software - are responsible for a quarter
of the growth resurgence, but only 3% of U.S. gross domestic
product," said Jorgenson. "Obviously, the impact of the IT-producing
industries is far out of proportion to their relatively small size."
SIA chairman Steve Appleton called for a concerted national effort
to increase the resources devoted to research and development in the
physical sciences. "Our current efforts are inadequate," said Appleton.
"Federal funding for R&D as a percentage of U.S. gross domestic
product has been almost cut in half over the past 20 years. We must
return to the investment levels of the mid-1980s in order to compete
for leadership."
SIA leaders will be calling on legislative and executive branch
leaders to support increasing research budgets for the physical
sciences in the National Science Foundation, the National
Institute for Standards and Technology, and the Department of
Defense. Specifically, the SIA is calling for:
- Increases of 7% per year in the research budget of the NSF
for 10 years, doubling the research budget over that period;
- An appropriation of $20 million to match the semiconductor
industry's support for the Focus Center Research Program, which
supports pre-competitive research on microelectronics technology at 30
universities to ensure continued U.S. leadership throughout the
remaining years of the CMOS era;
- An increase of $20 million to enhance the nanomanufacturing and nanometrology research capabilities of NIST; and
- An increase in funding for the Math and Science Partnership program of the No Child Left Behind act.
"U.S. leadership in technology is not inevitable," said Appleton.
"Leadership in information technology is a cornerstone of our national
strategy for economic growth, an improving standard of living, and
national security. The actions we take today to ensure continued U.S.
leadership will determine the quality of life enjoyed by our children
and grandchildren," Appleton said.