Sher has 20 years of sales and marketing management at companies like Applied Materials, where he was senior director of marketing, and Synexis, where he was as well as a chief marketing officer. He has an MBA from Adelphi University and a bachelor's of science from New York State University.
He will report to Ken Bliss, president and CEO.
Bliss makes carts for SMT manufacturing.
San Diego, Nov. 5 -- FocalSpot Inc., a provider of BGA/SMT inspection and rework, named Jeff Herberg global customer support manager and Glenn Olaes x-ray product line manger.
Herberg has 20 years of experience in : field service, applications engineering, technical training and sales support with GenRad/Nicolet Imaging Systems and Teradyne.
Olaes has eight years experience in : applications, customer support and regional sales management with Nicolet Imaging Systems/SRT, GenRad, Teradyne and VJ Electronix.
Lower demand for memory devices and passives in 2005 will offset modest improvements in microprocessors, logic and DSPs.
The event, one of the world's largest for electronics manufacturing and components, will be held Nov. 9-12, in Munich.
Eazix Inc., the design service and original design manufacturing arm of IMI, will be represented by its distributor, MEV Elektronik Services Gmbh.
In a press statement, IMI president and chief executive Arthur R. Tan said, "Electronica offers a great opportunity to showcase our complete, cost competitive, and high value electronics manufacturing solutions and introduce ourselves as a reliable partner of European OEMs."
IMI, an ISO 9001, ISO 14001, and QS 9000 company, has over 1 million sq. ft. of manufacturing space and 12,000 employees. For a Circuits Assembly interview with Tan, click here: http://circuitsassembly.com/cms/images/stories/pdf/0410/0410finepitch.pdf.
Word from Taiwan is that flip-chip substrate capacity might be maxed during the first half, due to heavy demand for for graphics chips and chipsets. Rumors of price hikes of up to 10% abound.
Bough Lin, chairman of Siliconware Precision Industries Ltd., reportedly told DigiTimes that demand for flip-chip substrates will be over 10 million units per month, 70 to 80% of which could be consumed by ATI Technologies and Nvidia combined. The two firms combined demand was five to six million units per month this year, DigiTimes said. And VIA Technologies and Silicon Integrated Systems will need 300,000 to 400,000 units per month, Lin reportedly said.
Phoenix Precision Technology, Taiwan's largest flip-chip substrate supplier, will double its capacity to five million units per month by the end of February, Lin told DigiTimes.
Griffin, GA - The new CAMX standards for factory-level data exchange were the focus of a two-day workshop sponsored by IPC (ipc.org), the trade group that helped author the specs. While several leading firms are touting the promise of CAMX, the jury remains out on whether the drivers are in place for widespread adoption.
The seminar took place Oct. 20-21 at NACOM, a tier-one automotive supplier. Most attendees were already involved in the CAMX (Computer Aided Manufacturing using XML) API project headed by Georgia Tech's Manufacturing Research Center. These participants - Agilent, Asymtek, BTU, DEK, Orbotech, Panasonic, Pillarhouse and Universal - shared specific experiences with CAMX implementation. NACOM also detailed its switch to CAMX-compliant manufacturing during a facility tour.
Lacking, however, was the type of attendees the seminar was developed for - that is, OEMs and other companies that have yet to jump on the CAMX bandwagon. The open-architecture standards have been slow to catch fire, possibly due to integration costs, security fears, the general market dive that shrunk IT budgets, the lack of hard numbers on ROI and the availability of competitors that provide proprietary software.
According to Thomas Baggio, an engineering manager at Panasonic, and David Hicks, CEO of Nematron Corp., a high-end control systems provider, the real drive is lacking because an end-user push has yet to materialize. This group of early adopters is betting that the market and demand will tick up. At worst, the adopters already have platform-independent process control machinery in place to offer the kinds of integration, flexibility, traceability and data control advantages that manufacturers need more than ever.