Around the web
8 Feb 20137 Feb 20136 Feb 20135 Feb 20134 Feb 20131 Feb 2013
China's pledge to reduce pollution after air-quality in Beijing hit hazardous levels on 20 days last month has cut financing costs for the world's biggest maker of solar wafers to a four-month low.
Bloomberg
One in five China-based LED lighting companies may fail this year as falling prices and oversupply batter an industry that Beijing bankrolled to try to build an energy-efficient future.
Reuters
LEDs Magazine
In yet another wrinkle in the solar trade war with China, a consortium of European manufacturers filed an anti-dumping complaint with the European Commission against solar glass from China.
UPI
As part of its broader restructuring measures, Fujitsu said it will cut 5,000 jobs, including 3,000 workers in Japan and 2,000 overseas, partly through early retirement offers. Fujitsu currently has about 170,000 workers world-wide.
Wall Street Journal
Cymer and ASML continue to expect the transaction to close in the first half of 2013.
Company release
The Wall Street Journal
Finacial Times
New York Times
Globalfoundries has announced a partnership with Adapteva to offer the company's Epiphany IV microarchitecture to customers using Globalfoundries' leading-edge 28nm-SLP process technology.
Company release
In yet another indication that self-published writers are gaining ground with readers and retailers, Apple on Tuesday launched a new section on its iBookstore called Breakout Books, featuring only self-published works.
Wall Street Journal
Opera Software continues to broaden the reach of its Opera TV Store when it agreed to integrate the platform into MediaTek's chipsets for smart TVs.
ZDNet
Appeals have been filed against the US Department of Commerce's recent ruling that Chinese photovoltaic manufacturers may assemble and ship modules to the US using solar cells produced in countries outside of China without incurring tariffs.
PV Magazine
For the last four months, Chinese hackers have persistently attacked The New York Times, infiltrating its computer systems and getting passwords for its reporters and other employees.
New York Times
Samsung said it was 99% sure that the phone wasn't one of theirs, adding: "It looks more like an HTC model."
Independent
Fujitsu and Panasonic are in the final stage of talks to go ahead with a merger of their large-scale integrated chip (LSI) operations into a new company, NHK reported Friday.
Marketwatch.com (Dow Jones)
Toshiba has subsequently brought this high level performance to its original microcontrollers and to ARM core-based microcontrollers. The newly-developed NANO Flash-100 achieves a zero-wait cycle during random access at 100MHz operation.
Company release
ARM, the designer of chips for leading smartphones, beat analyst expectations with full-year profits up 20%. A presentation to investors by CEO Warren East was dominated by talk of the 'post-PC' era, in which the market for Internet-enabled devices will spread into areas such as security and healthcare.
The Financial Times
A source familiar with the situation tells me that the software giant was worried about other customers thinking that Microsoft had incentive to value one over another, so it chose not to take an equity position.
Fortune
It's clear Samsung is serious about expanding its footprint in Silicon Valley. In December the Korean company announced it is building a 1.1-million-square-foot R&D center in San Jose and an incubator in Palo Alto. This week it also unveiled a "Strategy and Innovation Center" in Menlo Park, which Sohn oversees.
Fortune
Apple's press release for the new 128GB iPad contains an unusual concession from the company: the word "multitouch."
The Verge
Japan-based company Toray managed to impress us a couple of times last year by producing two different, yet equally useful touchscreen films.
GEEK.com
Designers can stretch the operating battery life of handheld devices through judicious management of the operational states. Touchscreens, which are now nearly ubiquitous, make a good example.
electronic design
E Ink, the parent company of Hydis, appeared to have no concrete plans on how to run Hydis, a local manufacturer of LCDs.
The China Post
Recent technology advances and a growing role for automotive Internet connections have auto makers giving a new look at windshield projection technologies that could one day replace dashboard displays.
The Wall Street Journal
The contraction of manufacturing across the eurozone slowed in January amid signs that the worst may be over, according to a survey.
BBC News
Smart phones primarily use two types of displays: the active-matrix organic light-emitting diode (AMOLED) and the liquid crystal display (LCD).
Mobile Device & Design
At CES Sharp made its new IGZO technology a centerpiece of the company's presentation on Press Day that will transform displays by moving from amorphous silicon (A-Si) material to the Indium Gallium Zinc Oxide with far superior electron mobility and much smaller TFTs (thin film transistors) that significantly boost the pixel aperture ratio.
Display Central
The EU launched a new ??1.2-million 3-year project called Flex-o-Fab that aims to help commercialize flexible OLEDs within six years. The project partners will create a a pilot-scale modular yet integrated manufacturing chain for flexible OLEDs, and use it to develop reliable fabrication / production processes.
OLED-info.com
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