| Cal-Comp 'Unaffected' by Thai Riots |
|
|
| Written by Mike Buetow | |||
| Wednesday, 03 September 2008 05:10 | |||
|
BANGKOK -- Cal-Comp Electronics says the Thai government's state of emergency has not affected the EMS provider's operations. Local security forces have used threats of guns, water cannons and tear gas to break up ongoing protests demanding the resignation of Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej. At least 78 persons have been reported to have died in the riots. Cal-Comp, the world's 14th largest EMS company, has two production sites near Bangkok, totaling six factories.
|
Columns
| An Early Spring? |
The second half of 2011 is behind us, literally and figuratively. |
| Read more... |
| ‘An End-to-End Solution for Assembled HDI Rigid-Flex’ |
Multi-Fineline Electronix (MFLEX) and AT&S last week announced an agreement to share their respective printed circuit board technologies. Under the agreement, AT&S's high-density interconnect (HDI) rigid PCBs and MFLEX's flex board capabilities will be offered to respective customers, and the two will partner on rigid-flex technology. |
| Read more... |
Features
| SMT Stencils from a Production Perspective |
Is the slew of new materials, coatings and processes truly unique, or just the same old hype? |
| Read more... |
| Implementing Good Test Coverage and Eliminating Escapes |
Experimental data reveal a strong correlation between SPI and AXI. |
| Read more... |
Products
These modular work benches offer quality and versatility for work areas that include network labs, assembly areas, shipping stations, security and command consoles, or as computer repair benches. Can...


