25 July 2005

A white coat world

The ‘boys in the back room’ continue to fuel semiconductor developments. By Graham Pitcher.

You encounter research and development in a number of places in the electronics industry. And where you run into it determines, to a large extent, the balance between the R and the D elements.
At the basic technology level, there’s far more R than D. But at the product level, the D tends to far outweigh the R. Then, of course, there’s gathering the necessary information, which can be classified as pure R.
If you look at the larger semiconductor manufacturers, there’s a lot less R than there ever used to be. Now, these companies – with a few exceptions – tend to rely on the basic R being done by universities and similar institutions, allowing them to get on with what they believe they do best, which is D.
But basic R&D is what keeps the electronics industry moving forward. And one of the big drivers of the industry is the constant need to move to ever smaller manufacturing processes – a fact implicitly recognised by Moore’s Law.

Author
Graham Pitcher

Supporting Information

Websites
http://www.freescale.com
http://www.imec.be
http://www.intel.com
http://www.mentor.com
http://www.national.com
http://www.research.philips.com
http://www.ti.com

Companies
Freescale Semiconductors
IMEC
Intel Corporation (UK) Ltd
Mentor Graphics (UK) Ltd
National Semiconductor
Philips Research
Texas Instruments

This material is protected by Findlay Media copyright
See Terms and Conditions.
One-off usage is permitted but bulk copying is not.
For multiple copies contact the sales team.

Do you have any comments about this article?

Add your comments

Name
 
Email
 
Comments
 

Your comments/feedback may be edited prior to publishing. Not all entries will be published.
Please view our Terms and Conditions before leaving a comment.

 

Related Articles

IR detector breakthrough

Researchers from China and the US have utilised single walled carbon nanotubes ...

Quad dsp core audio SoC

Looking to help companies differentiate their products in an increasingly ...

Memory breakthrough hailed

Researchers at UCL have developed the first purely silicon oxide based ...

The connected car

It's a somewhat chilling statistic; 1.2million people will die on the world's ...

Automating analogue design

Despite its continuing – and, in many cases, increasing – importance in modern ...

Catalysing demand

"Fuel cells are the most promising new form of energy generation – and always ...

Logging makes sense for testbench debug

The structured application of advanced logging techniques for SystemVerilog ...

Texas Instruments Low Power RF Selection ...

The new updated Low Power RF Selection Guide from Texas Instruments includes ...

Altium's Innovation Station

An introduction to the Altium Innovation Station. It includes an overview of ...

High speed metasimulator

The High Sigma Monte Carlo (HSMC) metasimulator from Solido Design Automation ...

Embedded World: Altera

Altera will showcase a suite of embedded fpga solutions at Embedded World 2012 ...

Signal processing libraries

Agilent Technologies has released SystemVue 2011.10, the latest update to the ...

Touch interface innovation

A new contact microphone, when connected to a system, is able to process sound ...

The Ben Heck Show (New series)

In this season 2 premiere of 'The Ben Heck Show', modding guru Ben Heck puts ...

Ben Heck builds LAN computer

In this episode of The Ben Heck Show, Ben builds a retro inspired portable LAN ...

Synopsys buys Magma

Magma has been nipping at the heels of the leading eda companies for some time, ...

Bionic lenses and rabbits

A Terminator style bionic contact lens has been developed by researchers in a ...

Patent trolls

Not only has the world become more litigious, it also seems to place more value ...

Brent Hudson, Sagentia

Sagentia's ceo tells Graham Pitcher how the consulting company is anticipating ...

Prof Donal Bradley, Imperial

Graham Pitcher talks to a researcher who was 'there at the start' of the ...

Wally Rhines, veteran, EDA

EDA veteran Wally Rhines tells Graham Pitcher that system design is the future ...