The editors of Semiconductor International will be providing their " take " on Semicon West 2007, including noteworthy events, what exhibitors and attendees expect to see at the show, what kind of information we're searching for and collected before and during the show and more.
Aug 31 2008 5:39PM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (0) |
I’m on a train from Madrid to Valencia, Spain, where I will attend the European Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference and Exhibition this week. As I look out over the rolling hills, I’m reminded of another solar event on the beautiful land surrounding San Francisco. As a pleasant final cap to a grueling SEMICON West/Intersolar North America week in mid-July, I joined Advanced Energy (Fort Collins, Colo.) for a tour of Cline Cellars, a winery in Sonoma, Calif.
We got the standard Cline Cellars tour, complete with the history of what was once a mission site, as well as fascinating tidbits about how wine is made. But our tour stopped perhaps longer than most do when they reach the site of th...Read More
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Aug 12 2008 2:22PM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (2) |
SEMI (San Jose, California), has released its final post-SEMICON West show report and, considering that the event took place during a time when our industry finds itself in one of its recurring doldrums, it looks very good. This once again demonstrates that it’s still by far the most important annual event for the global microelectronics industry, with considerable interest for those involved in photovoltaics, MEMS, solid-state lighting, flexible electronics and other related technologies.
...Read More
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Jul 21 2008 1:33PM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (1) |
Waiting in the SFO airport to return to Chicago, I saw a news story on electric cars. The electric car shown on the screen had a prominent slogan -- not on the back bumper but across the front chassis saying “Look Ma, No Gas!” The little white vehicle was similar to the Volkswagen Beetle. I was thinking it looked a little more like the old VW Bug because it was quite a bit smaller than the Beetle.
It’s so fun to see the electric car come to fruition and mass marketing. For those of you who haven’t seen it I recommend a movie called “Who Killed the Electric Car?” It tells the story of General Motor’s ambitious experiment in electric car...Read More
Jul 17 2008 11:07PM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (5) |
As expected, Moscone West was hopping this year more than I’ve ever seen it. As I mentioned in my last post about Intersolar, SEMI has made attempts in the past to get people to venture out of the North and South halls, but the beer gardens and oompah bands nonetheless left the packaging suppliers in the West feeling a bit unloved. This year was different. The solar pull was just too strong, and people were coming over in droves.
Perhaps no exhibitor epitomizes this shift better than our industry’s own dominant player, Applied Materials. It was hard to avoid the buzz they created at SEMICON West this year. Even sitting at the Lithography Brea...Read More
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Jul 16 2008 2:11PM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (0) |
An important part of the International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors (ITRS) committee’s mission is to identify the next big thing. Several possible phenomena are being explored to determine what will replace current flow in the so-called “next CMOS switch.” In the meantime, CMOS will be extended by carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and graphene, at least, that is what Jim Hutchby, one of the chairs of the emerging research devices group disclosed at the ITRS briefing earlier today. Graphene or CNTs are being evaluated as possible high-mobility channel materials in MOSFETs. In addition, spin and spin transport of graphene and CNTs may provide the mechanism needed to enable spintronics. But the fun really doesn’t stop there. Other phenomena such as quantum confinement, excitons and berry phase effects are being observed. As Alain Diebold, chair of the metrolog...Read More
Jul 16 2008 12:53AM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (0) |
Although both as journalists and members of the industry we wouldn’t miss coming to SEMICON West, after a couple of days of several very intense meetings with representatives of some of the companies attending, and covering the various events for both the Show Daily (for which we are responsible again this year) and for our Website, it's nice to have the chance to ditch the suit and escape into something pleasant and laid back.
One of these rare escapes is the yearly Semitool (
Jul 13 2008 3:40PM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (1) |
Once more into the breach, dear friends, once more:
Or close up the wall up with our swollen feet…
(With deepest apologies to William Shakespeare.)
Amazingly enough, folks, it’s SEMICON West time again! It seems as if the previous one took place only about three months ago. Of course, after more than 15 years of attending the thing, one’s bound to get a feeling of déjà vu, a sort of Twilight-Zone sensation of a hauntingly recurring event, of racing hamster-like down a M&oum...Read More
Jul 8 2008 8:31AM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (0) |
SEMICON West, one of our busiest shows of the year, just keeps getting busier. We used to have five days to cover everything — Monday through Wednesday up in San Francisco covering the front end, heading down to San Jose Wednesday night to finish out the week in the back end. And those were the days before Semiconductor International took over the show daily, and before SEMI started up its TechXPOT programs. Now we have just three days to get and write all the news we can for the show’s printed Daily News, our own ongoing online news and daily NewsBreak newsletters — not to mention the usual bit of face time with the sources that help us out so much throughout the year.
(I know. You’ve taken out your violins,...Read More
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Jun 30 2008 10:24AM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (0) |
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Jul 25 2007 11:39AM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (0) |
There was lots to be said about extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography at SEMICON West — some of it good, some of it not so good. On the one hand, Cymer announced that it would be ASML's EUV source supplier going forward. Along with that announcement, Cymer detailed the advances made in its laser-produced plasma (LPP) source design (Cymer switched from DPP to LPP three years ago). Cymer has managed to get IF power up to 50 W, which is significant progress in output power. And the lithography source manufacturer promises to reach 100 W by the end of the year (and, according to Cymer's Nigel Farrar, the company has hit every one of its marks since setting its roadmap at the beginning of last year). That's downright close to the target the industry has been aiming for to achieve production throu...Read More
Related entries in: Chip Production | Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) | Lithography | Nanoimprint | Next- Generation Lithography (NGL) | Semiconductor Production & Manufacturing | Topical Taxonomy--Electronics |
Jul 25 2007 7:49AM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (0) |
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Jul 18 2007 4:57PM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (0) |
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Jul 17 2007 3:28PM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (0) |
Rumor had it that there might be an announcement coming out of Sematech today on 450 mm wafers. This highly controversial topic may be the story that never was: at least, for 2007. The feeling we’ve gotten recently and also around the show, from tool manufacturers and even the majority of chip producers, is that 450 mm wafers simply are not a priority at this time. Making 300 mm wafer fabs more productive and cost-effective is a much more attractive alternative. There are really only three companies pushing the 450 mm question right now: Intel, Samsung and TSMC. While these companies together produce a lot of silicon, it’s not looking like they can get the rest of the industry on the bandwagon for now.
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