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Keyword: semiconductor

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  • Updated: Intel confirms $2.5 billion fab in China

    03/26/2007 11:52:28 AM PDT · by indthkr · 14 replies · 892+ views
    EE Times ^ | 03/26/2007 11:28 AM EDT | Mike Clendenin
    BEIJING — Intel Corp. confirmed Monday (March 26) that it will build a $2.5 billion, 300-mm wafer fab in the northern Chinese city of Dalian. Fab 68 will begin construction later this year and is expected to go online in 2010, using 90-nanometer technology to "initially" make chip sets, the company said. Fab 68 will be Intel's first wafer plant in Asia, and is its first in 15 years at a new site. The project is a major coup for China, which is campaigning to move up the technology food chain and to clean up its poor track record on...
  • Intel to Spend $2.5 Billion on Chip Factory in China

    03/25/2007 8:30:11 PM PDT · by jdm · 61 replies · 950+ views
    Bloomberg | March 26, 2007 | Ian King and Janet Ong
    Bloomberg is link only. Story
  • Wireless USB chip debuts

    03/02/2007 11:25:38 AM PST · by nickcarraway · 2 replies · 294+ views
    EE Times ^ | 03/01/2007 | R. Colin Johnson
    MONTEREY, Calif. — Startup Artimi Inc. (Santa Clara, Calif.) has unveiled a WiMedia-compliant dual-mode wireless USB and Bluetooth chip. Including both a media-access controller (MAC) and programmable applications processor, Artimi's A-150 chip is intended to help OEMs add WiMedia-based wireless USB and Bluetooth 3.0 communications capabilities to devices. The dual-mode chip provides up to 480-Mbit/s wireless communications to peripherals, adding just 60 milliwatts of power consumption to handheld devices. For older peripherals, thumb-sized USB devices with a A-150 inside can be plugged into the existing USB port to turn it into a wireless peripheral. The MAC and applications processor are...
  • New Players Emerge in Semi-Conductor Market

    08/31/2006 1:11:16 PM PDT · by 2Jim_Brown · 26 replies · 503+ views
    Tech News World ^ | August 31, 2006 | Tech News World
    Significant growth at Chelmsford, Mass.-based Hittite Microwave has pushed the company into the top 10 suppliers of Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) chips for the electronics industry, as Sony (NYSE: SNE) , NEC (Nasdaq: NIPNY) and Eudyna Devices all slipped in the rankings, a new report shows. Mitsubishi Electric and Toshiba , meantime, gained market share. Mitsubishi was the Japanese market leader last year in the GaAs device market, and saw "significant growth" for its mobile business as it led supply of power amplifiers to the 3G cellular handset market, according to the report by Strategy Analytics.
  • Research dishes out flexible computer chips

    07/25/2006 5:08:34 PM PDT · by annie laurie · 11 replies · 456+ views
    University of Wisconsin - Madison ^ | July 18, 2006 | James Beal
    New thin-film semiconductor techniques invented by University of Wisconsin-Madison engineers promise to add sensing, computing and imaging capability to an amazing array of materials. Historically, the semiconductor industry has relied on flat, two-dimensional chips upon which to grow and etch the thin films of material that become electronic circuits for computers and other electronic devices. But as thin as those chips might seem, they are quite beefy in comparison to the result of a new UW-Madison semiconductor fabrication process detailed in the current issue of the Journal of Applied Physics. A team led by electrical and computer engineer Zhenqiang (Jack)...
  • Paint-on semiconductor outperforms chips

    07/18/2006 4:50:50 PM PDT · by annie laurie · 23 replies · 813+ views
    PhysOrg ^ | July 12, 2006 | University of Toronto
    Researchers at the University of Toronto have created a semiconductor device that outperforms today's conventional chips -- and they made it simply by painting a liquid onto a piece of glass. The finding, which represents the first time a so-called "wet" semiconductor device has bested traditional, more costly grown-crystal semiconductor devices, is reported in the July 13 issue of the journal Nature."Traditional ways of making computer chips, fibre-optic lasers, digital camera image sensors – the building blocks of the information age – are costly in time, money, and energy," says Professor Ted Sargent of the Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department...
  • Company Gives 8,500 iPods To Workers (National Semiconductor)

    06/14/2006 12:10:07 AM PDT · by nickcarraway · 16 replies · 220+ views
    NBC11 ^ | June 13, 2006
    SANTA CLARA, Calif. -- How's this for a perk? A free iPod from the boss. National Semiconductor is giving each of its 8,500 employees a video iPod. It helps that National makes the chips used in many digital audio players and other portable entertainment devices. A statement from the company said the iPod giveaway caps its best year ever. The iPods aren't just to entertain workers. The company said it will communicate with employees via downloaded podcasts and other media playable on the iPods.
  • Intel to lay off 16,000 workers?

    06/01/2006 12:27:33 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 39 replies · 1,644+ views
    The Register ^ | Thursday 1st June 2006 | Tony Smith
    Is Intel about to rid itself of 16,000 workers - just over 16 per cent of its global workforce - later this month? So suggest whispers doing the rounds among Silicon Valley's technology community at the moment. That's what blogger Omid Rahmat claims (http://omid.tomshardware.com/2006/05/intels_amd_mome.html?www.reghardware.co.uk) at least. It's certainly no secret that Intel is examining every part of its business for signs of under-performance - CEO Paul Otellini said as much in April this year. "In terms of non-performing businesses, anything with a bracket will be looked at," he said. "It would be too simplistic to simply do a reduction in...
  • Forget Computers. Here Comes the Sun.

    04/15/2006 9:01:38 AM PDT · by neverdem · 52 replies · 1,898+ views
    NY Times ^ | April 14, 2006 | JOHN MARKOFF
    SAN JOSE, Calif. — T. J. Rodgers is surrounded by a sea of silicon wafers on the roof of his company's headquarters in a Silicon Valley industrial park. No, not the ones that Mr. Rodgers, who founded Cypress Semiconductor in 1982, used to make high-speed computer memories or the newer specialized chips that go into iPods and high-end Mercedes-Benzes. These wafers are soaking up the sun's rays and turning them into electricity. On the roof, he fusses over the occasional weed that has grown up in the cracks between the panels and speculates about using robots to keep the glass...
  • Chip Industry Sets a Plan for Life After Silicon

    01/04/2006 4:51:33 AM PST · by Neville72 · 313+ views
    NY Times ^ | 12/29/2005 | John Markoff
    Nanotechnology is officially on the road map. A handful of futuristic chip-making technologies at the atomic scale have been added to an industry planning effort that charts the future of the semiconductor manufacturing industry every two years. The transition to a post-silicon era is forecast in a report called the International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors, to be issued Saturday. The report, which is produced cooperatively by semiconductor industry associations from Europe, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and the United States, is used by the semiconductor industry as a planning tool to determine how best to spend research and development money for new...
  • Venture Capital Funding Soared in August

    09/06/2005 12:57:33 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 117+ views
    EE Times ^ | 09/05/2005 | Peter Clarke
    LONDON — Venture capital funding in the electronics and semiconductor sectors rebounded strongly in August as the deal flow and values belied its reputation as a month for vacations. EE Times' Venture Capital Counter (VCC) recorded 18 deals, which raised $229.80 million up from $180.15 million in July and far outstripping August 2004, when just $46.9 million was raised across 8 deals. Two California deals — Cortina Systems and Alloptic Inc. — each raised $30 million helping to drive up the average deal value. The deals recorded in August showed a typical geographical distribution with 13 U.S. deals, 5 in...
  • Valley firm has big plans for its tiny RFID chips (MANY SEE HUGE PROMISE IN TRACKING TECHNOLOGY)

    09/01/2005 10:36:35 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 3 replies · 209+ views
    San Jose Mercury News ^ | Thu, Sep. 01, 2005 | Dean Takahashi
    Alien Technology likes to think both big and small. The company has built a semiconductor chip assembly factory in Morgan Hill that has the capacity to assemble 2 billion chips a year. In North Dakota, the company is building another factory that can produce 20 billion chips a year. That's more than the 1 billion chips that Intel, the world's biggest chip maker, ships in a year. The reason Alien has such capacity is that its chips are a fraction of the size of Intel's. They're tiny specks, about the size of ground pepper, known as ``radio frequency identification'' chips....
  • Fateful meeting lights blue touchpaper (Galloway, wife; Zureikat)

    04/23/2003 4:43:16 PM PDT · by Shermy · 22 replies · 1,414+ views
    The Herald (Scotland) ^ | April 23, 2003
    MP's wife introduced him to Saddam sympathiser, writes CAMERON SIMPSON and AARON HICKLIN GEORGE Galloway first met the shadowy figure of Fawaz Zureikat through his Palestinian wife. The fateful meeting was to propel the man who goes under the soubriquets of "Gorgeous George" and the "MP for Baghdad Central" into one of the biggest crises of his colourful career. Dr Amineh Abu-Zayyad, 36, a Jerusalem-born scientist who married Mr Galloway in a secret ceremony in London in February 2000, had gone to the same university in Jordan as Mr Zureikat. Mr Zureikat's name first surfaced in a letter from Mr...
  • MP's partner linked to £80m trade in crude (MORE GALLOWAY)

    04/23/2003 4:48:46 PM PDT · by MadIvan · 32 replies · 602+ views
    The Daily Telegraph ^ | April 24, 2003 | Anton La Guardia
    Fawaz Zureikat, George Galloway's Jordanian partner who claims not to be involved in oil deals, is closely associated with a company that has traded Iraqi crude valued at millions of pounds, according to United Nations documents seen by The Daily Telegraph. Mr Zureikat has dismissed as a "forgery" an Iraqi intelligence report identifying him as the front man for Mr Galloway's secret contracts to buy Iraqi crude and sell humanitarian supplies under the UN's oil-for-food programme. The Jordanian businessman has repeatedly insisted that he does not deal in oil, although he does sell food and other civilian supplies to Iraq....
  • Carving new frontiers for ion-beam technology

    11/01/2004 2:12:28 PM PST · by 4kevin · 4 replies · 212+ views
    EurekAlert ^ | 11.01.04 | Paul Preuss
    Combined electron and ion beam imprinter opens the way for numerous applications An ion-beam system that simultaneously combines focused beams of electrons and positive ions promises to improve the versatility, efficiency, and economy of this important technology. The new system was developed by researchers at the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, who report its principles and applications in the 8 November 2004 issue of "Applied Physics Letters." Focused ion beams are important in the semiconductor industry, where they are used to carve structures with dimensions measured in billionths of a meter, repair defects in masks used for photolithography,...
  • Samsung Initiates $75 Million Second-Stage Expansion of Austin [Texas] Plant

    10/19/2004 6:43:51 AM PDT · by 1rudeboy · 17 replies · 809+ views
    McGraw-Hill Construction ^ | October 2004 | unattributed
    Samsung Initiates $75 Million Second-Stage Expansion of Austin PlantSamsung Begins Construction for Plant Expansion Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. recently broke ground on the second-stage expansion of its Austin memory-chip-fabrication plant. Samsung Pacific Construction Co. is the general contractor for the 34,000-sq.-ft. $75 million project. The Southwest District office of Greeley, Colo.-based Hensel Phelps is the structural subcontractor. The expansion of the company's manufacturing area is part of a succession of investments intended to equip the Austin plant for next-generation advanced-semiconductor-fabrication technology. In May 2003 Samsung announced a three-year investment plan of $500 million to upgrade, expand and increase capacity to...
  • A Semi-Agreement on Chinese-made Semiconductors?

    07/13/2004 11:41:37 AM PDT · by Willie Green · 4 replies · 277+ views
    AmericanEconomicAlert.org ^ | Monday, July 12, 2004 | Alan Tonelson
    For education and discussion only. Not for commercial use.When is a trade policy triumph not a trade policy triumph? Too often, when it's negotiated by the U.S. government. The latest U.S.-China deal on semiconductor trade may break from this dismal pattern. But the Bush administration and its predecessor have performed so miserably on the trade policy front that plenty of skepticism is justified about the July 8 announcement that Washington persuaded Beijing to agree to halt discriminatory policies that favored semiconductors produced in China over imports. The specifics of the agreement revealed thus far and the administration's deliberately tunnel-visioned approach...
  • China to Drop Tax Break for Semiconductor Makers, Bowing to U.S. Pressure.

    07/08/2004 9:49:40 AM PDT · by Pikamax · 5 replies · 256+ views
    Bloomberg ^ | 07/08/04 | Bloomberg
    U.S. and China Resolve Semiconductor Trade Dispute (Update2) July 8 (Bloomberg) -- China, the world's third-largest and fastest-growing computer chip market, bowed to pressure from Bush administration trade officials and agreed to drop a tax break that U.S. semiconductor makers said put them at a disadvantage. ``Effective immediately, China will not certify any new semiconductor products or manufacturers for eligibility for VAT refunds,'' U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick said at a news conference in Washington. Payments to companies already taking advantage of the tax break will stop by April 1. Companies in China's $18 billion chip market were eligible for...
  • U.S. chip makers face risks in boosting manufacturing in China

    04/05/2004 12:49:03 AM PDT · by sarcasm · 6 replies · 130+ views
    Seattle Times ^ | April 5, 2004 | Kristi Heim
    SHANGHAI, China — In the heart of a bustling free-trade zone in Shanghai, a $500 million Intel plant readies the flagship Pentium 4 chips that run the latest generation of computers. Hundreds of Chinese workers in lab coats monitor diamond-tipped wafer saws and other automated equipment, testing and assembling chips for the world market. Intel's plant is the largest investment in the zone, a former patch of farmland where more than 5,000 multinationals have set up shop. But just down the road, China's own Silicon Valley is emerging. In a vast high-tech park, gleaming glass-and-concrete buildings are sprouting up along...
  • Global Chip Sales Reach Record Growth

    04/02/2004 5:40:20 AM PST · by BenLurkin · 1 replies · 121+ views
    (Reuters) ^ | Fri Apr 2, 4:41 AM ET | (Reuters)
    AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Global sales of chips rose by a record 31 percent year-on-year in February as consumers and businesses snapped up computers and mobile phones and prices rose on the back of tighter supply, a survey found on Friday Global sales of semiconductors rose to $15.58 billion in February, up 0.2 percent compared with the previous month, according to numbers from the World Semiconductor Trade Statistics (WSTS). "That's the highest year-on-year comparison we've seen so far," said analyst Nicolas Gaudois at Deutsche Bank. The month-on-month sales increase was the highest since 1986, he added. He referred to the sales...