BANNOCKBURN, IL — IPC last month released its latest technology roadmap, the biennial guide to interconnect technological trends.
The 2011 roadmap incorporates data and comparisons to help users serve clients and/or guide their companies in identifying, selecting and developing the right technology alternatives to create the products needed for future markets.
The roadmap includes expanded regional analysis and comparison. In both the substrate and assembly sections, it provides insight into the regional differences in capability between Asia, Europe and North America.
Another addition is the link of emulators to industry standards and specifications. A new section discusses the changes that need to occur in industry standards content to make them relevant to tomorrow’s needs. This includes the addition of a state-of-the-art level for product features that demand a higher degree of precision.
In areas where changes occur quickly, such as the environment, health and safety, regulations and global stewardship, the roadmap has been updated to reflect the current state and future issues.
For more information, visit www.ipc.org/roadmap.
WEST HAVEN, CT – Enthone has appointed Sean Mirshafiei vice president, global PWB marketing.
Mirshafiei has held positions with Allied Signal, Isola Group, and most recently Rogers Corp.
Enthone supplies high-performance specialty chemicals and coatings, and is a business of Cookson Electronics.
PASADENA, CA – The Cassini plasma spectrometer instrument aboard NASA's Cassini spacecraft at Saturn has resumed operations.
Mission managers received confirmation on Mar. 16 that it was turned on; they plan to monitor the instrument for unusual behavior.
Last June, short circuits led to unexpected voltage shifts on the spacecraft. As a precaution, mission managers turned off the CAPS instrument while engineers investigated.
The investigation showed that tin plating on electronics components had grown "whiskers." The whiskers were less than the diameter of a human hair, but they were big enough to contact another conducting surface and carry electrical current.
TAIPEI -- Taiwanese printed circuit board manufacturers forecast production to rise 4.9% year-over-year to NT$526 billion ($17.7 billion) on higher demand for mobile electronics, the Taiwan Printed Circuit Association says.
Read more ...BANGKOK -- Apex Circuit broke ground this week on a new $130 million plant here, as the printed circuit board fabricator expects sales to continue to rise in the coming years.
SUZHOU -- The Chemitalic printed circuit board plant located here has been sold, according to reports.