TOKYO -- Kyocera Corp.
has made plans to outsource its cell phone production in North America
to Flextronics International and cut 1,700 jobs at its mobile phone
division to turn the loss-making business around.
The latest restructuring follows
Kyocera's announcement in March that it will quit its struggling
digital camera operations this year. The company will outsource
production at U.S. unit Kyocera Wireless Corp. to Flextronics from late
May.
BOSTON -- Nepcon East, the longtime expo for electronics
assembly, took place under chilly conditions in Boston. But that didn't
deter decent-sized crowds from checking out the latest equipment and
materials.
The biggest exhibitors were Universal, Assembleon and Bosch
Rexroth. Some notable local
suppliers chose to forego exhibiting while competitors made the trip to
Boston. For example, of the three leading screen printer suppliers in
North America, NJ-based DEK exhibited, although Speedline Technologies and EKRA America, both of which are based in the Boston suburbs, did not.
Numerous bare-board fabrication (MEI, Bare Board Group, Circuit Connect, Printed Circuit Corp., Sierra Proto Systems) and assembly companies (Masstech EMS and LightSpeed Manufacturing among others) were on hand. Most told Circuits Assembly that business growth was modest year-to-date and orders for lead-free boards were few and far between.
Among the highlights:
Juki Automation, the second leading seller of placement
machines worldwide, rolled out a pair of selective soldering units.
Called the 300L and 400L, the machines come with internal spray or
drop-jet fluxers, nozzles ranging from 4 mm to 30 mm and preheat
capability, and the 400L has a three-stage inline system for high-speed
automated soldering. The 400L can also be customized for three
miniwaves or a combination of one miniwave and one full wave.
Datron Dynamics, a
supplier of milling and routing equipment for assemblers, showed off
its new low-cost (under
$47,000) CNC machine for milling and engraving. The mini-Raptor has a
51 x 51" footprint and comes with a 60,000 rpm spindle, a solid granite
table and a 3-tool changer feed. It is said to reach rates up to 400"
per minute.
Excelta is offering the Smart Tweezer, a slick little device that among other things IDs the capacitance,
resistance or inductance of the surface mount device being picked up.
Once a major convention in its own right, the expo
has morphed into a solid regional show. It was in its third location in
three years, having shifted this
year to the brand new Boston
Convention Center, a
mammoth (510,000 sq. ft.) hall located on a pier just east of downtown.
Official attendance numbers have not yet been released.
Oyster Bay, NY -- Annual global sales of "dual-mode"
mobile phones -- which can connect to either a conventional cellular
service or a Wi-Fi network -- are likely to exceed 100 million by 2010,
according to a new study by ABI Research.
Dual-mode
handsets have been virtually unknown to consumers until recently, and
have not penetrated the enterprise space to any degree either.
But
according to ABI Research senior analyst Philip Solis, some of the
giants of global telecommunications -- notably British Telecom and
Korea Telecom -- plan to offer dual-mode services by the end of 2005.
That could start a very large ball rolling.
"The advantages of
dual mode handsets and services, when they arrive, can be summed up in
two words: seamless and economical," Solis said. Though the full
spectrum of capabilities won't appear in the first generation of
products, when these services are mature you will be able to start a
phone call at home (connecting to residential Wi-Fi network and then
broadband VOIP phone service), continue it in your car (switching to
your cellular provider's network) and wind it up at work (phone
switches to 802.11 LAN, and VoIP). The handset would sense the
available signals and switch automatically from one network mode to
another.