-
- News
- Books
Featured Books
- pcb007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current Issue
The Legislative Outlook: Helping or Hurting?
This month, we examine the rules and laws shaping the current global business landscape and how these factors may open some doors but may also complicate business operations, making profitability more challenging.
Advancing the Advanced Materials Discussion
Moore’s Law is no more, and the advanced material solutions to grapple with this reality are surprising, stunning, and perhaps a bit daunting. Buckle up for a dive into advanced materials and a glimpse into the next chapters of electronics manufacturing.
Inventing the Future With SEL
Two years after launching its state-of-the-art PCB facility, SEL shares lessons in vision, execution, and innovation, plus insights from industry icons and technology leaders shaping the future of PCB fabrication.
- Articles
- Columns
- Links
- Media kit
||| MENU - pcb007 Magazine
Automotive Technology: The Next Driving Force in Electronic Manufacturing
September 17, 2015 | Dan Feinberg, Technology Editor, I-Connect007Estimated reading time: 2 minutes
Many of us have lived through a series of electronic industry growth spurts: from radios to TV and then to high-definition home theater; from vinyl records to cassettes to DVDs; from simple four-function calculators to today’s powerful PCs; from Pong and Atari games to today’s X-Box, PlayStation and monster gaming computers. Each of these and other segments rely on advances in electronic technology design and manufacture and each of them spurs growth in the industry. One other such segment has also added to the scope of the industry and that segment is automotive electronics.
We started with AM and then FM radios, then full stereo systems complete with tape, then disk, then SSD storage; we added speed control then GPS, and then mapping. The higher-end vehicles now have collision and obstruction warning, back-up cameras, driver fatigue warning, maintenance and component failure warning and some have self-parking that actually works—well. But in the automotive segment, as the man once said, "You ain't seen nothing yet."
First of all, the devices we have come to expect in luxury and high-end vehicles are now becoming available and even common in lower priced ones. That alone will significantly increase automotive electronic device manufacture volume. The next wave, however, will dwarf what we have experienced to date. Soon, we will be considering the self-driving, fully connected and self-learning vehicle that is part of a network that teaches and learns from its peers. Controlling your own car in a traffic jam may soon become a thing of the past, and that is only the next step. The rapidly moving world of auto connectivity is moving more quickly than the typical four- to five-year development cycle of new cars. Because of this, carmakers cannot keep up with the overall development and progress regarding the capability and power of electronic components and systems. For years, automakers resisted this, but that’s changing. Industry experts say their surveys indicate most consumers think that's OK, as they want their car to act as an extension of their phone for music, contacts, navigation, and more.
As the I-Connect007 group has increased its consumer electronics coverage over the last year, we have come to realize that our readers are very interested in many aspects of the end-user market. Cell phones, tablets and PCs of course and now also drones, sports cams, etc., but also the new and rapidly advancing fields of advanced automotive electronics (and not just GPS and Bluetooth cell phone connectivity) are topics that have garnered a great deal of interest; but what is coming in automotive electronics has the potential to eventually dwarf them all. The road will be long, however, due to the life cycle of a vehicle being significantly longer than a cell phone or tablet. And yet, one has to ask how long before it is no longer cool to replace your phone every few years, but keep it over a reasonable life cycle just as you do your car.
Editor's Note: This article originally appeared in the September 2015 issue of The PCB Magazine.
Testimonial
"Advertising in PCB007 Magazine has been a great way to showcase our bare board testers to the right audience. The I-Connect007 team makes the process smooth and professional. We’re proud to be featured in such a trusted publication."
Klaus Koziol - atgSuggested Items
Simplifying Software Integration for Every Factory
10/22/2025 | Nolan Johnson, SMT007 MagazineAs a leading provider of factory digitalization solutions for electronics manufacturers, Cogiscan is at the heart of the software integration process. Davina McDonnell, director of marketing and product management, discusses how Cogiscan ensures that customers are ready to integrate and what it looks for to ensure a quick and appropriate installation.
MES Software Tools Need Thoughtful Integration
10/21/2025 | Nolan Johnson, SMT007 MagazineThe Global Electronics Association recently published a survey report on the state of EMS production software. This project, led by Thiago Guimaraes, director of industry intelligence, connects the dots across the global electronics value chain to uncover practical insights that individual companies might not have seen on their own. In this interview, Thiago discusses the whys and hows of this report.
SEMICON West: The Path to a $1 Trillion Future
10/14/2025 | Marcy LaRont, I-Connect007After more than 50 years in San Francisco, SEMICON West moved its 2025 show to Phoenix, which is significant because it highlights the importance of Arizona as a semiconductor and tech hub. Though the show will be back in San Francisco in 2026, the overwhelmingly warm welcome SEMI received from Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs, Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego, and ASU President Michael Crowe—who has been responsible for ASU repeatedly achieving the U.S. News and World Reports most innovative university ranking—was remarked upon repeatedly. All indications are that SEMICON West may well be back in Phoenix after that 2026 season.
Technica USA Named Exclusive U.S. Distributor for DCT Cleaning Products
10/14/2025 | Technica USATechnica USA is pleased to announce a strategic partnership with DCT USA, LLC, becoming the exclusive master distributor of DCT cleaning products in the United States, effective November 1, 2025.
Is Glass Finally Coming of Age?
10/13/2025 | Nolan Johnson, I-Connect007Substrates, by definition, form the base of all electronic devices. Whether discussing silicon wafers for semiconductors, glass-and-epoxy materials in printed circuits, or the base of choice for interposers, all these materials function as substrates. While other substrates have come and gone, silicon and FR-4 have remained the de facto standards for the industry.