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| IDTechEx |
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$1.58
Billion to be spent on Printed Electronics in 2008 |
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| Antenova |
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New
Generation of Multi-band HDA® Antennas for Mobile Handset Applications. |
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| Datanomic |
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Datanomic
Chosen for Major Healthcare Patient Record Migration Project |
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| IDTechEx.
$1.58 Billion to be spent on Printed Electronics in 2008. 2
April 2008 |
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IDTechEx expects the
spend on printed and thin film electronics beyond conventional silicon
to be $1.58 Billion this year.
The majority of this
is for OLED display panels ($0.69 Billion) which is the value of
the panel and not the final device. Virtually all of this is not
printed and on glass. Second largest by value is photovoltaics (PV)
beyond conventional crystalline and amorphous silicon, accounting
for $0.4 Billion. This is not organic PV however, which is still
some time away from commercialization, but inorganic technologies
such as CIGS and CdTe devices. For example, First Solar has an order
book exceeding $2 Billion for CdTe PV devices which they will be
delivering over several years.
Third largest is not
a specific product, but a value for inks for $0.21 Billion, which
are used for multiple different applications such as interconnects
for switches, membrane keyboards, windscreen heaters. We give the
ink value only here rather than the value of the product because
the products are so diverse in scope. Then we have the market for
sensors, at $0.11 Billion, which are printed sensors used for glucose
meters - approximately 2.2 billion are sold each year. $50 Million
will be spend on electroluminescent displays and $48 Million on
electrophoretic displays (the value of the front plane of the display
itself rather than the end device).
On the other hand, we
see the market for logic and memory beyond conventional silicon
to be just $10 Million this year - and virtually all of that is
samples and some services with some commercial sales beginning towards
the end of the year from Kovio, PolyIC and PolymerVision, for example.
Of all the technologies
covered in the $1.58 Billion market, only 27.8% of the components
will be predominately printed in 2008, rising to 79.6% in 2018.
Similarly, in 2008 only 15.7% of the components are on a non rigid
substrate (such as sensors and EL displays), rising to 74% in 2018.
The greatest opportunity is for devices which can be printed and
are flexible.
Over the next few years
we see particularly strong growth of inorganic PV technologies beyond
silicon and display front plane technologies. We see logic and memory
components taking off as a hundred million dollar market from 2011/2012;
batteries 2012 and OLED lighting from 2013/2014 achieving similar
sizes. This is based on our research of progress of companies in
these technology areas and our assessment of the technology development.
By 2018 the market for all this new toolkit of electronics will
be $46.94 Billion.
If we look at the market
size by territory, IDTechEx find that most work is taking place
in Europe, the USA and Japan. In many respects Europe is in the
lead. For instance, the first printed electronics factories are
appearing there. However, we note that the creation of new companies
is low given the huge academic effort going on there. The USA is
proving better at creating new companies. In East Asia while the
number of organizations working on the topic is slightly less than
the other two continents, it disguises the fact that those companies
tend to be huge conglomerates. By spend, we see that in 2008 56%
of the market spend is in East Asia. This is because the biggest
component - OLED display modules - are made there and bought by
companies making devices, such as MP3 players. However, it disguises
the fact that many of the devices are then sold to North America
and Europe. Indeed some manufacturing will be moving to East Asia
in due course but we also see a higher than expected market in Europe
and USA given the dispersed manufacture capability of this new electronics.
For more information,
read Printed & Organic Electronics Forecasts, Players & Opportunities
2008-2028. The report includes forecasts of markets by geographical
region, component, organics versus inorganic, flexible/conformal
and many other parameters. Realistic timescales and the emergence
of new products are given, as are impediments and opportunities
for the years to come. Statistics for activity in East Asia is given.
What will be the split between organic, inorganic and composite
solutions by year? It is all here, with activities of over 600 companies
listed.
Visit http://www.IDTechEx.com/pe
for more details.
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| Antenova.
New Generation of Multi-band HDA® Antennas for Mobile Handset Applications.
5 February 2008 |
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Antenova, the integrated antenna and RF solutions company, announced
the availability of two new high performing multi-band High Dielectric
Antenna (HDA®) embedded antennas for mobile handset and portable
device applications; a 4mm low profile penta-band antenna and a
six-band antenna. Antenova’s 4mm low profile penta-band HDA® antenna,
the industry’s thinnest five-band antenna, is ideally suited for
ultra-thin mobile handsets, and the new six-band HDA® antenna is
ideally suited for mobile handsets, PDAs and UMPCs for the global
markets. “
As more and more applications are designed into devices, co-existence
has become critical and board space a premium,” stated Greg McCray,
CEO of Antenova. “But unfortunately, as the antenna size (volume)
gets smaller, the performance decreases, so it becomes even more
critical to have higher performing smaller antennas. With its’ smaller
size, multi-band capabilities and lower detuning qualities, Antenova’s
HDA® antennas allow device designers and manufacturers more freedom
in their PCB layout without having to sacrifice antenna performance
and efficiencies. The low profile of our 4mm high penta-band HDA®
antenna enables handset manufactures to keep pace with consumer
demand for smaller and thinner handsets, while the six-band HDA®
antenna provides device manufactures the development, cost and time-to-market
advantages of designing one device for their global markets.”
Antenova’s 4mm low profile penta-band antenna covers the GSM 850,
GSM 900, DCS 1800, PCS 1900 and WCDMA 2100 bands and is also suitable
for CDMA/TDMA 850 and 1900. With a small volume of about 1cc and
an impressively low 4mm height, this antenna is the thinnest penta-band
antenna in the world and offers over 50% average terminal radiation
efficiency over all five bands. The hexa-band antenna covers the
same five cellular bands plus the 2.4 GHz band for Bluetooth® and
Wi-Fi® applications, has a volume of 4.5cc and offers an average
terminal efficiency of greater than 50% over all five cellular bands
and 40% efficiency in the 2.4 GHz band.
McCray added, “Antenova has been leading the industry with its
high performing multi-band HDA® internal antennas for mobile handsets
and portable devices. Antenova’s patented HDA® antennas, through
our licensee partners and customers, have been in mass production
since 2004 and enable some of the most advanced wireless devices,
smartphones and feature phones around the world. HDA® antennas can
be found in a significant number of handsets from 4 of the top 5
handset OEMs, including Motorola and Samsung, and in a multitude
of handsets from ODM customers in Taiwan and China.”
For more information please visit http://www.antenova.com
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Datanomic.
Datanomic Chosen for Major Healthcare Patient Record Migration Project.
7 April 2008
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Data quality specialist
Datanomic, today announced that BT Global Services, has adopted
its dn:Director enterprise data quality management application to
cleanse, de-duplicate, validate and structure patient data for maximum
efficiency in the implementation of its major data migration project.
dn:Director will audit the accuracy and completeness of patient
data records, spanning up to two decades, involving hundreds of
thousands of detailed patient records.
BT Global Services is
a key supplier to the healthcare industry, providing technology
and services. BT is committed to helping its clients exploit the
right technology and make services more accessible, efficient and
effective. In their capacity of driving the data migration project
forward and dealing with the issues of extremely large volumes of
complex data and the subsequent management of that data, BT Global
Services needed to find a solution to address concerns about the
quality of information in the Patient Administration System, particularly
the level of duplicated patient records.
Clinicians and administrators
were often faced with multiple records for an individual patient,
where each record might contain partial, erroneous or out of date
information. Valuable time, which could have been better invested
in patient care, was being wasted on the administrative overhead
of searching for the correct patient record. The problem has been
caused by previous system mergers, which had focused on the mechanics
of pooling data rather than ensuring that the content was correct
and fit for purpose. Addressing this problem provided the opportunity
to save money and improve patient care.
“When we identified the
need for a data quality tool, Datanomic was our first port of call
because our previous experience of using its software and the support
we had received had been excellent,” noted Nick Pope, Data Migration
Lead, BT Global Services. “When we evaluated dn:Director we liked
the fact that it provided integrated functionality through a single
interface; unlike other products, we did not need a collection of
tools to fulfill all of our requirements. Datanomic’s product is
also easy to get up and running and supports the data migration
from profiling the source all the way through to producing clean
data for loading.”
dn:Director delivers
a reliable and trustworthy “single view of the truth” by restoring
the lost value that inherently exists in meaningful data. Unlike
other products and platforms, dn:Director is completely non-prescriptive
with regards to how its various functions are used, but has the
flexibility to be customised depending on customer requirements,
providing pre-defined templates to address common business challenges,
such as cleaning and de-duping customer data.
“What has impressed us
most about dn:Director is its ease of use,” commented Pope. “New
users become effective within just a few days because the product
is so visual and intuitive. But Datanomic has not compromised on
the functionality in order to deliver a great user experience; dn:Director
provides integrated capabilities for profiling, auditing, cleaning,
transforming and matching records. In our case, we found matching
to be a particular strong point and also made use of dn:Director’s
unique capability to perform phrase profiling, which identifies
the most common words and phrases in a string field. This helped
us to quickly discover critical pieces of information buried within
free-format text fields.”
BT Global Services uses
dn:Director to produce a range of data analysis reports to monitor
the quality of data. Because of the sensitive nature of patient
information, they are not able to automate all but near perfect
matches. However, dn:Director is used to identify possible matches
for clinical review.
For more information
please visit http://www.datanomic.com
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