Market News

BANNOCKBURN, IL – A host of trade groups today released a guide detailing the minimum requirements for material declaration in accordance with the EU REACH regulations.

The Consumer Electronics Association, DigitalEurope, JGPSSI and IPC jointly announced the release of Joint Industry Guide – Material Composition Declaration for Electrotechnical Products.
 
JIG-101 Ed. 2.0 is a materials declaration guide said to facilitate reporting of material content information across the global electrotechnical supply chain. The document encompasses the latest regulatory requirements, including the REACH directive. The guide focuses on the substances to declare.

 
It is available for free download from at www.ipc.org/jig-101.

AUSTIN, TX — First quarter global TV shipments declined 6% year-over-year to 43.3 million units, down 25% sequentially on seasonal trends.

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SAN JOSE -- Calling the smart grid's potential "100 or 1,000 times larger than the Internet," Cisco Systems today announced plans to roll out a series of routers and switches aimed at controlling electrical use across the nation's energy networks and into homes.

The market for communications equipment for electrical infrastructure use could be worth $100 billion, Cisco says.

Cisco notes that the nation's energy grids can be fragmented and slow to respond, and that there is a tremendous need for electricity monitoring and optimization.

President Obama's stimulus plan budgeted $11 billion for smart grids; Cisco believes that market will be worth some $20 billion market in five years.

SANTA CLARA, CA – Agilent Technologies Inc. reported second-quarter sales fell 25% from last year to $1.09 billion. Orders dropped 33% year-over-year.
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SANTA CLARA, CA – The European Union today fined Intel an unprecedented $1.45 billion for so-called strong-arm sales tactics. Intel said it will appeal.


Intel, which has the lion’s share – about 80% – of the microprocessor market, has reportedly used its market share dominance to force PC OEMs – including Acer, Dell, H-P, Lenovo and NEC – away from competitors, including AMD.
 
The EC findings call for Intel to cease certain sales practices, which while undisclosed may include offering certain discounts in exchange for exclusive supply deals.
 
Regardless of how the EU suit ends up, Intel may not be out of the woods. The US Federal Trade Commission is currently investigating the company as well.
ROUND ROCK, TXDell said it would no longer export nonworking parts, including broken computers and monitors, to developing countries.

While the US has no federal laws banning the export of e-waste, Dell said in a press statement it was responding to complaints about lax environmental regulations. The firm said it had previously specified this requirement to contractors, but this is the first time the company has stated a clear policy on the subject.

There are loopholes, however. Dell's policy has exceptions for raw materials going back into manufacturing and nonworking parts that need to be shipped because of warranty agreements. Nor did Dell explicitly state it would prohibit waste from being shipping outside the nation it was consumed in.

Dell is the world's second largest PC maker, behind Hewlett-Packard.

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