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From the growing role of AI in design tools to the challenge of managing cumulative tolerances, these articles in this issue examine the technical details, design choices, and manufacturing considerations that determine whether a board works as intended.
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Limited Capacity, Order Shifts Drive March Consumer DRAM Price Surge, Led by Sub-4Gb Products
April 7, 2026 | TrendForceEstimated reading time: 1 minute
Major suppliers are continuing to phase out production of mature products below DDR4, according to TrendForce’s latest research on the memory industry. As supply tightens structurally, DRAM prices have already posted significant cumulative increases in recent months.
TrendForce forecasts that consumer DRAM contract prices will continue to rise by 45–50% QoQ in 2Q26 after taking into account ongoing supply reductions, order transfers, and the slower pace of capacity expansion among Taiwanese suppliers.
TrendForce reports that in March 2026, the pricing trends in the consumer DRAM sector were mainly driven by products with densities under 4 Gb. For instance, the average prices for DDR4 4 Gb increased by over 20% MoM, far outpacing price increases seen in higher-density products. This followed an earlier price jump in DDR4 and a 2025 announcement from major suppliers that some legacy-node products would be reaching end-of-life (EOL).
Taiwanese manufacturers shifted capacity toward DDR4 to capture the first wave of spillover demand. However, demand is now also shifting into DDR3 and DDR2 markets. With capacity constraints limiting supply, average prices across DDR3 and DDR2 products increased by 20–40% in March, marking an even sharper rise.
Looking ahead to the second quarter, Taiwanese suppliers raised quotations in March, with some prices already reflecting expected second-quarter increases. Furthermore, they’ve adopted a more assertive pricing stance amid constrained capacity and intensifying order migration.
Consequently, transaction price gaps across different customers are expected to narrow significantly in the coming quarter. In contrast, South Korean suppliers already command relatively higher ASPs in the consumer DRAM segment, and are therefore expected to implement more moderate price adjustments in the near term.
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How Are You Vetting Your Supply Chain?
04/28/2026 | Didrik Bech, CONFIDEEFor many years, supplier management was largely focused on standard commercial priorities: cost, quality, lead time, and delivery performance. If a supplier met specifications, shipped on time, and remained price competitive, the relationship was often considered healthy. However, the world has changed.
The Chemical Connection: When the Industry Moves Faster Than the Standards
04/29/2026 | Don Ball -- Column: The Chemical ConnectionAs a supplier of wet processing equipment, we have rules and standards we must adhere to, including both regional and national electrical codes and safety and environmental regulations, as well as myriad other standards to make the equipment safe to use. Things are a little different when it comes to rules and standards for manufacturing PCBs, though, because technical advances and requirements change so quickly that standards can’t keep up.
Global Sourcing Spotlight: Building a Supply Chain That Bends, Not Breaks
04/29/2026 | Bob Duke -- Column: Global Sourcing SpotlightThe global supply chain is a complex, interdependent, and shifting organism. In the past few years, pandemics, tariffs, wars, natural disasters, and transportation chaos have tested it like never before, revealing that fragility is expensive. The companies that survive do so not through luck but through resiliency. For decades, companies built sourcing strategies around the illusion of stability—one supplier, region, and price. It worked until a port closed, a single supplier went down, or a production line froze.
New Guidance Targets Scope 3.1 Emissions Gap in Electronics Supply Chains
04/22/2026 | I-Connect007 Editorial TeamA new industry guidance document aimed at improving how electronics companies account for Scope 3 Category 1 (Scope 3.1) emissions marks a significant step toward more consistent and effective supply chain decarbonization. A recent webinar hosted by the Global Electronics Association and the Responsible Business Alliance (RBA) addressed a persistent challenge: Despite the material impact of Scope 3.1 emissions, fewer than half of electronics companies currently report them.
Global Sourcing Spotlight: The True Cost of Low Cost
03/25/2026 | Bob Duke -- Column: Global Sourcing SpotlightThere’s an illusion in global sourcing that cheaper means better business. For decades, procurement teams received rewards for driving down unit prices, without realizing how many zeros those “savings” add to the other side of the ledger. With today’s volatile, interconnected supply chains, the lowest price is rarely the lowest cost.