electronicsweekly

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September 9

  • China coming for the RF front-end module market

    ➀ The RF front-end module market is projected to grow from $15.4 billion (2024) to over $17 billion by 2030, driven by 5G/6G adoption and innovation despite cost pressures;

    ➁ Chinese OEMs like Huawei, Vivo, and Xiaomi are empowering domestic RF suppliers to disrupt traditional leaders (Qualcomm, Broadcom) through vertical integration and compact module designs;

    ➂ With accelerated 6G R&D and government support, Chinese players aim to redefine global market dynamics, challenging established players.

    HuaweiQualcommsemiconductor
  • Ayar Labs hooks up with Alchip on co-packaged optics

    ➀ Ayar Labs与Alchip合作,结合共封装光学(CPO)技术与先进封装工艺,为超大规模数据中心提供高性能、高能效的AI加速器和平台;

    ➁ 合作中整合了Ayar Labs的光学I/O技术、Alchip的先进封装能力及台积电的COUPE™和SoIC®等封装技术,旨在解决数据传输瓶颈;

    ➂ 双方计划通过可扩展的解决方案推动下一代AI基础设施应用,进一步提升数据吞吐量和能源效率。

    AI ChipHPCsemiconductor
  • From Print to Podcasts: 65 Years Legacy of Electronics Weekly – Timeline

    ➀ The article chronicles the 65-year evolution of Electronics Weekly, transitioning from print (1960) to digital platforms like podcasts and video (2025);

    ➁ It highlights key tech milestones, including Intel's founding (1968), ARM's establishment (1990), and NVIDIA's inception (1993);

    ➂ The timeline also notes industry shifts, such as the rise of microprocessors, the internet, and modern multimedia journalism in electronics.

    ArmIntelNVIDIA
  • Need a Zener?

    ➀ The article revisits a historical advertisement from Electronics Weekly's July 1978 issue, focusing on semiconductor components like Zener diodes;

    ➁ It highlights nostalgic insights into the electronics industry's past, emphasizing the evolution of technology and components;

    ➂ Authored by David Manners, a veteran journalist with over four decades of experience covering the electronics sector.

    Historymemorysemiconductor

September 8

  • Dual-band radar Earth observation

    ➀ NASA and ISRO jointly launched the Nisar Earth observation satellite with dual-band (L/S) synthetic aperture radars, achieving meter-level resolution for all-weather monitoring;

    ➁ The satellite tracks ice mass, vegetation, sea-level changes, and groundwater monthly using a 12m mesh antenna, while providing natural disaster early warnings;

    ➂ Texas Instruments supplied radiation-hardened ICs including power modules, utilizing special QML Class P plastic packaging for lower orbit radiation requirements and cost efficiency.

    SpaceTexas Instrumentssatellites
  • Canadian Destroyers get LED lighting

    ➀ Marl International and Apex Industries will supply marine-grade LED lighting systems for three Royal Canadian Navy destroyers, covering both interior and exterior lighting with approximately 9,000 lights and management systems;

    ➁ Marl, acquired by Glamox in 2024, transfers licensing rights to Apex for local manufacturing in Moncton, enhancing Canadian supply chain capabilities;

    ➂ The River-class ships (HMCS Fraser, Saint-Laurent, Mackenzie) will replace older models, with the first delivery by 2026 and potential contracts for three additional destroyers under discussion.

  • IQE looking for a buyer

    ➀ IQE, a Cardiff-based compound semiconductor company, is exploring a potential sale and has entered an "offer period" under regulatory guidelines after being approached by an undisclosed buyer;

    ➁ The company lowered its 2025 revenue forecast to £90-100 million due to contract delays in wireless and photonics segments, driven by weak mobile sales and U.S. military budget deferrals;

    ➂ IQE is negotiating the sale of its Taiwan operations to repay debt and fund core initiatives, with interim results set for release on September 23, 2025.

    semiconductor
  • Mojo raises $75m

    ➀ Mojo Vision secures $75 million in Series B funding led by Vanedge Capital, supported by existing and new investors;

    ➁ Funds will accelerate commercialization of its advanced micro-LED platform targeting AI infrastructure and applications;

    ➂ The platform integrates 300mm silicon architecture, GaN-on-Silicon emitters, and quantum dots to optimize size, brightness, and power efficiency.

    AIGaNsemiconductor
  • Cambridge Tech Week draws superstars

    ➀ Cambridge Tech Week (September 15-19, 2025) will focus on next-generation technologies like quantum computing, photonics, and AI, featuring panels on regulation, ethics, and global innovation ecosystems;

    ➁ Key speakers include Quantinuum founder Ilyas Khan, Raspberry Pi’s Eben Upton, former Meta executive Nick Clegg, and AI policy leaders like Professor Sana Khareghani;

    ➂ The event includes startup showcases, workshops, student programs, and debates on scaling tech innovations, supported by Dell Technologies and AMD.

    AIAMDRaspberry Pi
  • Broadcom and Raspberry Pi back Experience AI for Malaysia

    ➀ Broadcom Foundation, Raspberry Pi Foundation, and Penang Science Cluster sponsor 'Experience AI' in Malaysia, expanding AI literacy education nationwide after a successful 2024 pilot funded by Google DeepMind;

    ➁ The program provides teachers with AI resources (lesson plans, activities, assessments) to train students in AI fundamentals, ethics, and safety, benefiting over 50,000 students through 1,300 trained educators;

    ➂ Collaboration aims to strengthen coding and AI skills as critical 21st-century competencies, with global reach extending to 160 countries and 1.6 million students.

    AIRaspberry Pisemiconductor
  • Andøya spaceport, Astrobotic partner for Xodiac rocket launches

    ➀ Norwegian Andøya spaceport partners with Astrobotic to use Xodiac reusable rockets for simulating lunar landings and testing flight systems;

    ➁ The collaboration starts in 2026, with Andøya providing ground operations and infrastructure support to enhance its commercial space capabilities;

    ➂ The U.S.-Norway Technology Safeguards Agreement (2025) facilitates hardware exports, positioning Andøya as a key European satellite launch hub.

    HPCSpacesemiconductor
  • Ed Sorts The Immigrant Issue

    ➀ The article portrays a fictional dialogue where "Ed The Serial CEO" advises the UK Prime Minister on using technology to manage illegal immigration, including drone surveillance (Tekever), real-time monitoring systems (Anduril), and facial recognition;

    ➁ Ed proposes relocating migrants to Orford Ness, suggesting infrastructure upgrades to create temporary accommodations while balancing public perception and media optics;

    ➂ The plan involves political maneuvering, leveraging connections with construction firms, and framing the solution to avoid backlash from critics and the media.

    PrivacySoftwarecybersecurity

September 6

September 5

  • 3U military VPX computer for land and air

    ➀ Concurrent launched the Huey, a 3U rugged military VPX computer designed for land and air edge processing, meeting MIL-STD standards for defense environments;

    ➁ The system features forced-air augmented card-edge cooling with an external fan housing for maintenance without breaking environmental seals, and supports 90–264Vac power input up to 250W;

    ➂ Targeted at ISR radar, signals intelligence, and sensor-rich platforms, it is tailored for software-defined radios, RF front-ends, and digital acquisition systems.

    HPCMilitarycomputer
  • Astute signs SCI Semiconductor

    ➀ Astute Group partners with SCI Semiconductor to globally distribute the ICENI family of memory-safe microcontrollers (MCUs) based on CHERI technology, ensuring hardware-enforced security;

    ➁ The ICENI MCUs eliminate memory safety vulnerabilities, addressing critical needs in national infrastructure, defense, automotive, and medical industries;

    ➂ This collaboration aligns with the UK’s Digital Security by Design initiative, positioning CHERI as a commercial solution for unhackable hardware protections against cyber threats.

    Microchipcybersecuritysemiconductor
  • Hynix instals High-NA EUV machine for memory production

    ➀ SK Hynix becomes the first memory manufacturer to install ASML's High-NA EUV lithography system (EXE:5200B) at its M16 fab, aiming to streamline DRAM production for AI and HPC markets;

    ➁ The 0.55 NA system enables 1.7x smaller circuit patterns and 2.9x higher density, reducing multi-patterning steps while targeting next-gen HBM development;

    ➂ Accelerating equipment deployment by six months gives SK Hynix a competitive edge over Samsung, positioning it to lead in AI memory solutions with earlier mass production capabilities.

    DRAMHBMSK Hynix
  • Quantinuum raises $600m

    ➀ Quantinuum, formed by Cambridge Quantum and Honeywell's merger, secured $600 million in funding with investors including NVIDIA's NVentures and JPMorganChase;

    ➁ Funds will support the launch of its trapped-ion quantum system Helios and advance fault-tolerant quantum computing;

    ➂ Collaborates with NVIDIA Accelerated Quantum Research Centre, RIKEN, SoftBank, and Infineon for quantum tech development.

    HPCNVIDIAQuantinuum
  • Q2 semi equipment billings up 24% YoY

    ➀ Q2 2025 semiconductor equipment billings reached $33.07 billion, up 24% YoY and 3% QoQ, driven by demand for leading-edge logic, HBM-related DRAM, and shipments to Asia;

    ➁ SEMI highlights strong H1 2025 revenue exceeding $65 billion, building on 2024's record $117 billion billings;

    ➂ Investments focus on advanced logic, memory for AI, and regional supply chain resilience, per SEMI CEO Ajit Manocha.

    DRAMHBMsemiconductor
  • DigiKey Factory Tomorrow video series gets “Behind the Robot”

    ➀ DigiKey releases Season 5 of its Factory Tomorrow video series titled 'Behind the Robot,' focusing on industrial automation technologies such as robotic cells, intelligent sensors, and integrated systems;

    ➁ The series explores cloud connectivity, predictive diagnostics, and the impact of automation on workforce transformation, featuring experts from partners Eaton and SICK;

    ➂ The Factory Tomorrow series, initiated in 2021, highlights evolving automation infrastructure and its role in advanced manufacturing environments.

    DigiKeyIndustry 4.0robotics

September 4

  • Where The EU Gets Its Energy

    ➀ The EU reduced its reliance on Russian gas from 45% (2021) to 19% (2023), though Russian imports saw an uptick in 2023 due to increased demand in Italy, Czechia, and France.

    ➁ To fill the gap, the EU diversified suppliers: Norway (91.1 bcm), the U.S. (45.1 bcm, up 139%), Algeria, Qatar, and Azerbaijan became key sources, with overall gas imports still 61.4 bcm lower than in 2021.

    ➂ A $750 billion U.S.-EU energy deal (2024-2028) will expand imports of LNG, oil, and coal, with the U.S. already leading in EU oil (15%) and LNG (50.7%) supplies, and ranking second in coal (31.3%).

September 1

  • China slams US revocation of VEU authorisation for Intel, Samsung and Hynix

    ➀ The U.S. revoked VEU authorization for Intel, Samsung, and SK Hynix's China-based manufacturing operations, impacting their ability to export certain tech items without individual licenses;

    ➀ China's Ministry of Commerce criticized the move as politically driven and accused the U.S. of weaponizing export controls to hinder China's semiconductor development;

    ➂ The ministry warned the decision undermines global semiconductor supply chain stability and reflects unilateral U.S. actions.

    IntelSK HynixSamsung
  • Q2 NAND revenues up 22% QoQ

    ➀ Q2 NAND revenue of the top five suppliers surged 22% QoQ to $14.67 billion, driven by price recovery and market demand;

    ➁ Samsung led with $5.2 billion revenue (up 23.8% QoQ) and 32.9% market share, followed by SK Hynix ($3.34 billion, up 52.5% QoQ) and Kioxia ($2.14 billion);

    ➂ Micron and SanDisk also saw growth, reflecting broader industry recovery in NAND memory.

    SK HynixSamsungsemiconductor
  • Ed Finds An AI Wheeze

    ➀ The UK Education Secretary expresses concerns about students using AI to generate coursework, threatening academic integrity;

    ➀ Ed proposes reviving medieval assessment methods, including oral exams, supervised handwritten tests, and QAA-certified university standards to identify rigorous institutions;

    ➂ A controversial AI detection tool developed by a private company is suggested for adoption, despite its questionable accuracy, with potential financial incentives for stakeholders.

    AISoftwarecybersecurity

August 29

  • Monolithic flat-packs for ‘origami’ robots

    ➀ Researchers at Pusan National University developed a monolithic flat-pack design using carbon fiber and aramid cloth with rigid and flexible regions for origami-like robots;

    ➀ The technique employs multi-resin deposition, achieving 6.95GPa stiffness in rigid sections and 0.66GPa flexibility in hinges, enabling complex motions;

    ➂ Potential applications include transformable robots, spacecraft solar panels, and foldable electronics substrates.

    Carbonroboticsspacecraft
  • When UWB Was An Infant

    ➀ In 2008, Pulse-Link showcased early commercial progress in UWB technology, shipping initial products and reference designs for wireless HDMI and co-ax applications;

    ➁ The company's UWB tech achieved 890Mbits/sec throughput with JPEG2000 compression, addressing most HDMI needs despite lower rates than full 10.2Gbits/sec HDMI;

    ➂ Strong market interest emerged, with 80 reference designs sold post-CES, highlighting UWB's potential in high-speed data transmission.

    HDMIUWBsemiconductor
  • Rose petals inspire better sweat sensor for sport

    ➀ Researchers at Waseda University developed a sweat sensor inspired by the hydrophilic/hydrophobic properties of rose petals to monitor electrolyte loss during exercise;

    ➁ The sensor uses ion-selective membranes with microtextured surfaces mimicking rose petals, enabling water retention, self-cleaning, and motion resilience without adhesives;

    ➂ A 3D-printed wearable prototype demonstrated accurate sodium monitoring in sweat during running tests, with a self-cleaning mechanism triggered by increased sweat volume.

    Medicalsensor
  • Z-Wave Alliance publishes updated Certified Product Guide

    ➀ The Z-Wave Alliance launched an updated searchable database of 4,500 certified smart home devices, covering categories like lighting, sensors, and Z-Wave Long Range (ZWLR) products;

    ➁ The guide allows filtering by brand, protocol version, and regional frequencies, emphasizing interoperability and security through mandatory certifications;

    ➂ Z-Wave Long Range devices are highlighted for quadrupling wireless range and supporting 10x more nodes, aligning with the alliance's mission to expand smart home adoption.

    IoTcybersecurity
  • Most Read – Chips Act money, Navitas Semi, Prophesee’s GenX320

    ➀ The U.S. Chips Act faces backlash as companies like TSMC threaten to reject subsidies if required to offer equity to the government;

    ➁ Chris Allexandre appointed as Navitas Semiconductor’s new CEO, succeeding founder Gene Sheridan;

    ➂ Qualcomm launches the Dragonwing Q-6690, the first mobile processor with integrated UHF RFID, and Prophesee introduces its GenX320 Starter Kit for Raspberry Pi 5, enabling neuromorphic vision applications.

    QualcommRaspberry Pisemiconductor
  • 5G SA finally takes off

    ➀ 2025年Q2全球移动核心网络(MCN)市场同比增长19%,其中5G领域增长31%,语音核心网络增长18%,全年增长率预期翻倍至10%;

    ➁ 5G SA部署加速,全球71家运营商已启动消费者5G SA服务,RedCap技术降低物联网设备成本,MEC边缘计算及动态网络切片技术提升性能,AI应用驱动核心网络需求;

    ➂ 中国运营商积极推广5G SA覆盖,华为、爱立信、诺基亚和中兴占据全球市场主导,公共云和混合云策略重新成为5G核心网部署的关键选项。

    5GAIDell
  • Unsourced Random Access

    ➀ Researchers from Skoltech have published a monograph on "Unsourced Random Access," targeting efficient communication for millions of IoT devices in 5G Advanced/6G networks;

    ➁ The proposed method allows devices to connect without pre-coordination or identification, reducing delays and improving energy efficiency;

    ➂ The monograph integrates theoretical frameworks with practical implementations, supported by collaborations with MIT and other institutions under the Russian Science Foundation.

    HPCIoTsemiconductor