Asian Semiconductor

www.AsianSemiconductor.com/ AsianSemi.com

 
Seoul (Korea Newswire) March 11, 2009 11:23 AM — Honoring the next generation of American innovators, Intel Corporation today announced the winners of America’s oldest and most prestigious pre-college science competition, the Intel Science Talent Search, a program of Society for Science & the Public. Eric Larson, 17, of Eugene, Ore., won the top award, a $100,000 scholarship from the Intel Foundation, for his research project classifying mathematical objects called fusion categories. Eric’s work describes these in certain dimensions for the first time. 

Also achieving top honors in the competition: 

Second Place: William Sun, 17, of Chesterfield, Mo., received a $75,000 scholarship for his biochemistry project that studied the effects of a recently discovered molecule that could potentially help efforts to treat bacterial infections or prevent neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease. 

Third Place: Philip Streich, 18, of Platteville, Wis., received a $50,000 scholarship for his chemistry project on carbon nanotubes that may lead to the development of ultra-strong materials and ultra-fast nano-electronics. Philip’s work has resulted in five provisional patent filings. 

Fourth Place: Narendra Tallapragada, 17, of Burke, Va., received a $25,000 scholarship for his project to find ways to simplify complex models of atomic and molecular interactions. His goal is to one day create “mini-computers” that can be used, for instance, to create automatic insulin pumps inside diabetic patients or intelligent clothing that responds to temperature. 

Fifth Place: Chelsea Jurman, 17, of Roslyn, N.Y., received a $25,000 scholarship for studying underage drinking behavior and how it is tied to teen perceptions of parental drinking and parenting behaviors. 

Sixth Place: Noah Arbesfeld, 17, of Lexington, Mass., received a $25,000 scholarship for his work seeking to understand a fundamental structure underlying all of algebra, with potential impact for string theory. 

Seventh Place: Alexander Kim, 17, of Fairfax, Va., received a $20,000 scholarship for researching the variation and diversification in populations of the Giant American River Prawn, the largest freshwater invertebrate in North America. His research furthers understanding of how species evolve and has implications for the future of ecosystems. 

Eighth Place: Preya Shah, 17, of Setauket, N.Y., received a $20,000 scholarship for designing and synthesizing a tumor-targeting drug for cancer treatment that represents a new approach to delivery of chemotherapy agents and possibly treatment of multi-drug resistant cancer without causing significant side effects. 

Ninth Place: Nilesh Tripuraneni, 18, of Fresno, Calif., received a $20,000 scholarship for formulating a set of hydrodynamic equations that may provide a potential method to better understand the first movements of the universe and could aid in the development of a quantum theory of gravity. 
Tenth Place: Gabriela Farfan, 18, of Madison, Wis., received a $20,000 scholarship for her project investigating Oregon Sunstones, which contain one of the most common rock forming minerals in the world. She determined that these sunstones have unique micro-inclusions that allow them to look one color from one angle and another from a different angle. 

The remaining 30 finalists received $5,000 scholarships and a new laptop powered by an Intel® Core™2 Duo processor. 

This year’s Intel Science Talent Search finalists come from 17 states and represent 35 schools. Of the more than 1,600 high school seniors who entered the Intel Science Talent Search 2009, 300 were announced as semifinalists in January. Of those, 40 were chosen as finalists and invited to Washington, D.C., to compete for the top 10 awards. 

“At a time when our country requires innovation to spur economic growth, it is inspiring to see such talented young people using critical thinking skills to find solutions to scientific challenges,” said Intel Chairman Craig Barrett. “These 40 scientists not only represent hope for America to remain competitive in the global economy, but also verify the power of investing in math and science.” 

The Intel Science Talent Search encourages students to tackle challenging scientific questions and develop the skills necessary to solve the problems of tomorrow. Over the past 67 years, Science Talent Search finalists have gone on to win seven Nobel Prizes, a Fields Medal, the National Medal of Science and a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship. 

Society for Science & the Public, a nonprofit organization dedicated to the public engagement in scientific research and education, has owned and administered the Science Talent Search since its inception in 1942. 

Elizabeth Marincola, president of Society for Science & the Public said, “The road to mitigating the most challenging problems we face, not just as a country but as a world, is paved with science. Society for Science & the Public is proud to join with Intel in congratulating Eric and all of the Intel Science Talent Search 2009 finalists whose dedication to science and research will lead us down this road.” 

Intel believes that students everywhere deserve to have the skills necessary to become the next generation of innovators. Intel’s commitment to education extends far beyond the Intel Science Talent Search. Over the past decade alone, the company has invested more than $1 billion, and its employees have donated more than 2.5 million hours toward improving education in 50 countries. The Intel Science Talent Search is jointly funded by Intel Corporation and Intel Foundation. 

To view an online press kit, visit www.intel.com/pressroom/kits/events/sts2009/index.htm 

To join Intel’s community of people inspired by education, visit www.inspiredbyeducation.com, or visit www.intel.com/education. 

To learn more about Society for Science & the Public, visit www.societyforscience.org. 

Intel, the world’s largest chip maker, is also a leading manufacturer of computer, networking and communications products. Additional information about Intel is available at www.intel.com/pressroom. 

Intel, the Intel logo, and Intel Education Initiative are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the United States and other countries. 

* Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.

News Source: Intel

   
Seoul (Korea Newswire) March 10, 2009 06:27 PM — Due to rush orders from downstream clients, NAND Flash average contract price of 1H March, 2009 showed stability or slight rise. Currently, the rush orders are mainly from the restocking demand in the China domestic market, especially for white-box or copycat (or so-called mountain-bandit in China) cell phone applications, says DRAMeXchange.  

In addition, the quarter-end effect in March will also lower downstream clients’ inventory level and suppress further purchasing demand. Downstream clients may also request upstream NAND Flash suppliers to further reflect the premium of the selling price due to the cost saved from new process technology migration. Under both positive and negative factors in March, the NAND Flash contract price is likely to remain relatively stable in the short term, according to DRAMeXchange’s analyses. 

With the recent memory card and UFD rush orders and the upstream vendors regulating their output according to the market demand, DRAMeXchange believes that the NAND Flash price is going to fluctuate in a limited range. Now the upstream vendors prefer the price to remain close to the production cost, and the downstream vendors mostly hope the contract price can be adjusted gradually in order to avoid the profit loss due to the rapid price adjustments. Also, with the rebounding of the NAND Flash price, the pace of high density memory card and UFD replacing lower ones will slow down and the time schedule of SSD’s taking off will be delayed. 

The current NAND Flash price rally started from the end of last year stemmed from the NAND Flash vendors decision to halt their 8 inch production and lower their 12 inch utilization rate. Amid the continuing supply decrease, the major NAND Flash chip 16 Gb MLC average contract price rose by 91% in the past three months. 

The current price rally eased the upstream vendors operating losses and provided sufficient fund for the fabs to continue manufacturing. The downstream memory card and UFD vendors also indirectly benefited from the current price uptrend. After gradually clearing the inventory of NAND Flash chips and memory cards purchased with lower cost previously, the vendors’ revenue of the past two months increased remarkably. 

Although the mainstream chip price went up over 90 percent, most upstream and downstream NAND Flash vendors remain conservative toward the future price trend of 2009. The current visibility of NAND Flash in retail channels is only one to two weeks, excluding the non-periodic OEM rush orders from the China market. The remaining global demand comes from regular channel inventory replenishment. The inventory of most channels now maintains at three to four weeks level. 

Breaking down the market demand by regions, DRAMeXchinage states that the U.S. market is the slowest, followed by European market. Although the Asian market demand is also decreasing, it still performs comparatively better and the China market is the best performer. This is because the China market benefits from its local white box and minor-brand mobile phones, as shipments are relatively less influenced by the global financial crisis.

News Source: DRAMeXchange 

Media Contact
 
DRAMeXchange Jocelyn Chen Tel: +886-2- 77026888 ext 620 jocelynchen@dramexchange.com Fax: +886-2-7702-6989
Seoul (Korea Newswire) March 05, 2009 08:39 AM — Intel Corporation today announced the 26 companies receiving Intel’s Preferred Quality Supplier (PQS) award for commitment to quality and performance excellence in 2008. These suppliers exceeded high expectations and tough performance goals to distinguish themselves from the thousands of suppliers that work with Intel.

Winners of the PQS award include:

AceCo Precision Manufacturing; Asyst Technologies, Inc.; Cisco Systems, Inc.; Dow Corning Corporation; FUJIFILM Electronic Materials; Ibiden Co., Ltd.; KES System & Service (1993) Pte Ltd.; Linde Electronics, a Member of the Linde Group; Murata Manufacturing Co., Ltd.; Nan Ya Printed Circuit Board Corporation; Nippon Mining & Metals Co., Ltd.; Praxair Electronics; Richtek Technology Corporation; Rofin-Baasel; Rosendin Electric; Securitas Security Services USA, Inc.; Senju Metal Industry Co., Ltd.; Skanska; Tektronix, Inc.; Thermal Product Solutions, a Division of SPX Corporation; Tokyo Electron Limited; TriQuint Semiconductor, Inc.; Tyco Electronics; Verizon Business; VWR International, LLC; and Xstrata Recycling, Inc.

“The standard by which companies are measured to be considered world-class quality continues to rise,” said Craig Brown, vice president of Intel’s Technology and Manufacturing Group and director of Materials. “Companies must not only achieve ever-improving traditional measures of product quality, but they must also understand and mitigate their impact on the environment. This year’s recipients of the Preferred Quality Supplier award have risen to this new level of challenge in their respective industries and have also shown their ongoing commitment to build an affordable, innovative and agile supply chain. We are pleased to work with these role models.”

“The excellence demonstrated by Intel’s top performing suppliers is truly remarkable,” said Robert Bruck, vice president of Intel’s Technology and Manufacturing Group and general manager of Technology Manufacturing Engineering. “The enduring commitment to industry-leading innovation, affordability and speed separates these suppliers from their peers and is critical to delivering increased value to our customers.”

The PQS award is part of Intel’s Supplier Continuous Quality Improvement program, which encourages suppliers to strive for excellence and continuous improvement. To qualify for PQS status, suppliers must score 80 percent on a report card that assesses performance and ability to meet cost, quality, availability, delivery, technology and responsiveness goals. Suppliers must manage and deliver on a challenging improvement plan and a quality/business systems assessment. Furthermore, the 2008 recipients demonstrated basic compliance to the Electronic Industry Code of Conduct and Intel’s Green Sustainability Program. Additional information about the SCQI program is available at supplier.intel.com/quality/scqi.htm.

Recognition events will be held in Tokyo and Santa Clara, Calif. this month to honor the PQS award winners. In addition, there will be an online advertisement launch and acknowledgement on Intel’s corporate Web site.

The PQS winners provide Intel with the following products and services:

AceCo Precision Manufacturing supplies fab spares and refurbishment
Asyst Technologies, Inc. supplies automated material handling systems
Cisco Systems, Inc. supplies networking hardware infrastructure, IP telephony and enterprise collaboration products
Dow Corning Corporation supplies electronic adhesives
FUJIFILM Electronic Materials supplies advanced chemistry and equipment for semiconductor device manufacturing
Ibiden Co., Ltd. supplies flip-chip substrate packages
KES System & Service (1993) Pte Ltd. supplies burn-in boards, TIUs, and BIB/TIU/UBID maintenance
Linde Electronics, a Member of the Linde Group, supplies ultra-high purity gases and chemicals and onsite services
Murata Manufacturing Co., Ltd. supplies multilayer ceramic capacitors, inductors, ferrite beads and wireless modules
Nan Ya Printed Circuit Board Corporation supplies substrates and printed circuit boards
Nippon Mining & Metals Co., Ltd. supplies sputtering targets for physical vapor deposition applications
Praxair Electronics supplies electronic process and bulk gases, sputtering targets and spare parts management
Richtek Technology Corporation provides power management solutions
Rofin-Baasel supplies laser mark equipment
Rosendin Electric provides electrical construction services
Securitas Security Services USA, Inc. provides security services
Senju Metal Industry Co., Ltd. supplies soldering materials
Skanska provides construction management
Tektronix, Inc. supplies validation test equipment
Thermal Product Solutions, a Division of SPX Corporation, supplies epoxy curing, IHS and pre-bake ovens
Tokyo Electron Limited supplies semiconductor production equipment
TriQuint Semiconductor, Inc. supplies amplifiers, RF switches and front end module for WLAN products
Tyco Electronics supplies CPU sockets, connectors and passive components
Verizon Business supplies network telecommunications and cellular services
VWR International, LLC provides distribution of global sourcing and supply chain management solutions
Xstrata Recycling, Inc. provides HVI component scrap processing

Intel, the world’s largest chip maker, is also a leading manufacturer of computer, networking and communications products. Additional information about Intel is available at www.intel.com/pressroom.

Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the United States and other countries.

* Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.

News Source: Intel

Seoul (Korea Newswire) March 06, 2009 08:53 AM — Intel Corporation Chairman Craig Barrett announced that his company is investing in a new academic research facility dedicated to high-performance computing (HPC) in France. 

The HPC lab initiative marks the start of a 5-year collaboration and is Intel’s first major investment in academic research in France. The four-party agreement signed today is a model of public-private partnership, linking Intel with government agencies and academia. 

“Research is vital to a country’s long-term economic health and competitiveness,” said Barrett, who was in Paris today to help launch the HPC laboratory. “By investing in innovation, including research and development, we make a commitment to accelerate the benefits of technology in France and in other parts of Europe.” 

Joining Intel in the effort, the Commissariat à l’Energie Atomique (CEA), a technological research organization funded by the French government, is contributing its expertise in HPC tera architecture and integration. France’s national HPC agency, Grand Equipement National de Calcul Intensif, will provide its scientific end user applications and feedback. The University of Versailles St Quentin en Yvelines will make technical contributions, such as multi-core performance evaluation and code optimization. 

“It is strategic for a public research institution like CEA to cooperate with a world-leading company such as Intel to prepare for the next generation of HPC facilities that the European scientific community and industrial companies expect,” said Bernard Bigot, CEA general administrator and High Commissioner. 

The joint research center will be built about 20 kilometers southwest of Paris in Île-de-France Teratec, a region home to universities and other scientific research facilities. Intended to be used primarily by university students in France and other European Union countries to address future HPC challenges, the lab will seek to accelerate R&D and innovation in Europe in keeping with the Intel Labs Europe (ILE) initiative announced earlier this year. 

The lab is being designed as an “exascale” high-performance computing center focused on hardware and software optimization. Exascale computing is a next-generation technology and refers to systems that can handle a million trillion calculations per second (1018). 

The HPC lab in France marks Intel’s first significant European R&D announcement since forming ILE in January. A key part of Intel’s commitment to collaborative research, ILE serves as a platform for future potential investments and advanced innovation activity in Europe. 

Before arriving in France, Barrett spent a day visiting Romania, and tomorrow he plans to travel to Serbia. Both visits are on behalf of the United Nations and the Intel World Ahead Program, which strives to improve education, health care, entrepreneurship and government services in developing countries worldwide by accelerating access to computers, connectivity and localized Internet content. Additional information is available at www.intel.com/changingtheworld and www.intel.com/intel/worldahead. 

Barrett also chairs the United Nations Global Alliance for Information and Communication Technologies and Development. 

Intel, the world’s largest chip maker, is also a leading manufacturer of computer, networking and communications products. Additional information about Intel is available at www.intel.com/pressroom. 

Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the United States and other countries. 

* Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.

News Source: Intel

Seoul (Korea Newswire) March 05, 2009 08:41 AM — Fourteen companies were recognized today as Intel Corporation’s most accomplished suppliers, earning the Supplier Continuous Quality Improvement (SCQI) award for 2008. The award, for world-class, outstanding performance, overall excellence and commitment to quality, recognizes companies that provided products and services deemed essential to Intel’s business success. 

The 2008 SCQI winners are: Daewon Semiconductor Packaging Industrial Company; DEK International GmBh; DISCO Corporation; Hitachi High-Technologies Corporation; Hitachi Kokusai Electric Inc.; ICOS Vision Systems, NV; JSR Corporation; Kelly Services, Inc.; Moses Lake Industries (Tama Chemicals); Munters Corporation; Nikon Corporation; STATS ChipPAC Ltd.; SUMCO Corporation; and TXC Corporation. 

“Intel’s Supplier Continuous Quality Improvement award winners demonstrated sustained world-class performance in 2008,” said William Holt, senior vice president and general manager of Intel’s Technology and Manufacturing Group. “We’re pleased to acknowledge the vital contribution these suppliers have had in helping Intel meet customer requirements.” 

“We are delighted to recognize the outstanding achievements of the SCQI award winners,” said Brian Krzanich, vice president and general manager of Intel’s Manufacturing and Supply Chain. “These 14 suppliers lead the industry in commitment to innovation, agility, manufacturing support and sustainability.” 

The SCQI award is part of Intel’s Supplier Continuous Quality Improvement program, which encourages Intel’s suppliers to strive for excellence and continuous improvement. To qualify for SCQI status, suppliers must score at least 95 percent on a report card that assesses performance and ability to meet cost, quality, availability, delivery, technology and responsiveness goals. Suppliers must manage and deliver on a challenging improvement plan and a quality/business systems assessment. Furthermore, this year’s recipients demonstrated basic compliance to the Electronic Industry Code of Conduct and Intel’s Green Sustainability Program. Additional information about the program is available at supplier.intel.com/quality/scqi.htm. 

Recognition events will be held in Tokyo and Santa Clara, Calif. this month to honor the SCQI award winners. In addition, there will be an online advertisement launch and acknowledgement on Intel’s corporate Web site. 

The SCQI winners provide Intel with the following products or services: 

Daewon Semiconductor Packaging Industrial Company supplies plastic injection mold trays and LGA covers (shipping media) 
DEK International GmBh supplies printing machines 
DISCO Corporation supplies precision cutting, grinding and polishing equipment 
Hitachi High-Technologies Corporation supplies etchers, CD-SEM and defect inspection tools 
Hitachi Kokusai Electric Inc. supplies diffusion furnaces 
ICOS Vision Systems, NV supplies automated visual inspection equipment 
JSR Corporation supplies advanced photoresists, packaging materials and adhesives 
Kelly Services, Inc. provides staffing services 
Moses Lake Industries (Tama Chemicals) supplies ultra-high purity process and performance chemicals 
Munters Corporation supplies VOC abatement equipment 
Nikon Corporation supplies lithography scanners for technology development and high volume manufacturing 
STATS ChipPAC Ltd. supplies full turnkey packaging and test services 
SUMCO Corporation supplies 200mm and 300mm polished and epitaxial silicon wafers 
TXC Corporation supplies crystals and oscillators 

Intel, the world’s largest chip maker, is also a leading manufacturer of computer, networking and communications products. Additional information about Intel is available at www.intel.com/pressroom. 

Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the United States and other countries. 

* Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.

News Source: Intel 

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