electronics https://cascadesystems.net Electronic Contract Manufacturing Thu, 04 May 2023 14:41:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.4 https://cascadesystems.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/cropped-cst_icon_white_bg.png electronics https://cascadesystems.net 32 32 180530448 Honoring Intel’s Gordon Moore — and his green legacy https://cascadesystems.net/honoring-intels-gordon-moore-and-his-green-legacy/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=honoring-intels-gordon-moore-and-his-green-legacy Tue, 25 Apr 2023 00:03:12 +0000 https://cascadesystems.net/?p=1241 It was with sadness that we learned of the passing of Intel co-founder, Gordon Moore, on March 24th. A true, but also exceptionally humble, titan in the tech sector, Gordon was instrumental in the introduction and innovation of the microprocessor – which, needless and no exaggeration to say – altered the course of humanity, ushered […]

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It was with sadness that we learned of the passing of Intel co-founder, Gordon Moore, on March 24th. A true, but also exceptionally humble, titan in the tech sector, Gordon was instrumental in the introduction and innovation of the microprocessor – which, needless and no exaggeration to say – altered the course of humanity, ushered in the Information Age, and impacted our civilization as a whole.

I was also struck by an announcement four days earlier, namely news of the release of the Climate Change 2023: Synthesis Report by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). I mention this for two reasons.

First, it called to mind that, later in his life, Gordon leveraged a sizeable portion of his formidable wealth and influence to support environmental initiatives and protect our planet by establishing the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. Here’s an excerpt from that institution’s Statement of Founders’ Intent:

“Our interest in environmental conservation stems from our personal observations of changes in the natural world and from the dependency of all living species on the planet’s health. During our lifetimes we have observed the transformation of much of what was natural wilderness to highly-developed property. Jungles have become golf courses; beaches, condominium developments; and the oceans have been over-fished and become garbage dumps. With these changes, precious ecosystem functions are lost, often forever. Huge areas of the planet are in danger of having their basic structure altered as a consequence of development and exploitation of resources. [Our Foundation seeks to support] pragmatic solutions that maintain the integrity of essential ecosystem functions while accommodating necessary development and other activity.”

So, in the same week that the IPCC was issuing its latest, much-anticipated, and (per usual) good-news/bad-news report on climate change, we found ourselves bidding farewell to an tech industry leader who established a powerful and lasting legacy focused on countering and mitigating many of the darker trends outlined in the report. (Since its founding in 2000, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation has granted $2.2 billion in support of environmental initiatives, or just under 50% of the foundation’s total grants awarded… That’s forward thinking and generosity on a massive scale!)

If you think about it, a second legacy that Gordon predicted and left us with is the increasingly powerful and positive role that silicon, microprocessors and PCBAs are playing in achieving the goals furthered by Gordon’s and Betty’s philanthropic endeavors.

Consider the positive, enabling, and even critical role electronics are playing in advancing ‘green’ technology. Here at CST alone, we’ve helped develop, manufacture and plan to deliver a wide and diverse array of PCBAs intended for truly exciting ‘green’ applications.) Here are just a few examples:

SECTORAPPLICATIONS for PCBAs (just to name a few!)

Solar Power

  • solar charge controllers and monitors;
  • power inverters and converters, including DC-DC for batteries
  • maximum power point trackers (MPPTs);
  • various sensors to measure current, amps, fault detection, etc.
  • on-sight and remote communications/monitoring

Electric Vehicles (EVs)

  • battery management systems (BMS), including controlling the
    charging and discharging, monitoring temperature and
    voltage, and communicating with other vehicle systems;
  • various power electronics, including DC-AC and DC-DC
    converters, inverters, motor controllers;
  • instrument clusters, gauges, and other UIs;
  • infotainment, audio, and navigation systems;
  • manual and adaptive lighting and environment control

EV Charging Stations

  • power conversion;
  • system control and monitoring;
  • communication, including implementation of protocols such as
  • Controller Area Network (CAN) or Ethernet;
  • safety and protection functions; user interfaces

Advanced Battery / Energy Storage

  • battery management systems (BMS);
  • battery testers, chargers, and inverters;
  • battery packs and energy storage systems (ESS)
  • displays
  • diagnostics

Wind Power

  • control systems, including blade pitch, yaw, and speed);
  • power converters and conditioners;
  • communication systems, including communication from a remote control center and between turbines, for coordinated
    operation and optimization;
  • real-time weather monitoring and prediction, including
    assessment of wind speed, direction, variability, etc.;
  • interior/exterior lighting and control systems

Carbon Capture

  • control and monitoring functions;
  • gas and purity analyzers;
  • process controllers;
  • data logging and transmission systems; power electronics

Given these and other instances in which electronics are helping civilization reduce its negative impact on planet Earth, I believe all of us can, and should, take a measure of pride in making these kinds of technologies possible. I know we, at CST, do. And I believe Gordon Moore undoubtedly did, too.

–  Shantanu R. Gupta,
President & CEO, Cascade Systems Technology

PS: If you are building products in any of the clean-tech segments outlined above, contact us and we would be happy to partner with you to make a difference to the future of our planet!

 

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Recession ahead? How tech manufacturers can be ready. https://cascadesystems.net/recession-ahead-how-tech-manufacturers-can-be-ready/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=recession-ahead-how-tech-manufacturers-can-be-ready https://cascadesystems.net/recession-ahead-how-tech-manufacturers-can-be-ready/#respond Wed, 27 Jul 2022 17:15:23 +0000 https://cascadesystems.net/?p=1058 Since COVID came to our shores in January 2020, we have been on one roller coaster ride after another. First, we contended with complete shutdowns, mask mandates, and truly dreadful pandemic-driven hospital and mortality rates. Next came supply chain issues and difficulties enticing and landing qualified candidates for employment. Atop all of that, America next […]

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Since COVID came to our shores in January 2020, we have been on one roller coaster ride after another. First, we contended with complete shutdowns, mask mandates, and truly dreadful pandemic-driven hospital and mortality rates. Next came supply chain issues and difficulties enticing and landing qualified candidates for employment. Atop all of that, America next found itself contending with a raft of jarring ongoing domestic political issues and unprecedented divisiveness. And now, we’re wrestling with and rightfully distracted by continuing Geo-political issues, a war in Europe, skyrocketing inflation, and shifts in monetary policies, interest rates, and stock market performance that make operating an organization of any size or scope exceedingly unpredictable.

Whew!

Perhaps the shutdowns are behind us, but just the same the world has become and remains a lot more challenging for everyone to navigate, including businesses. And now, it appears economists and news media are beginning to use the “R” word, as the possibility of another recession looms ever closer. (This article yesterday from Reuters is but one of many recent pieces on the gathering clouds.)

In the face of all that, what’s an electronics contract manufacturing company like Cascade Systems Technology (CST) to do in order to prepare, stay nimble, remain ready to tackle the unknowns, and emerge on the other side of the storm healthy and even stronger? As Intel’s legendary Andy Grove said: “Only the paranoid survive.” Some level of paranoia is good in these times.

Here are some thoughts and strategies we are putting into action at CST. Perhaps my tech ecosystem partners and colleagues will find this summary of them useful.

  • Especially in a recession, it’s important to keep one’s supply chain team strong. This includes hiring and retaining your own excellent procurement, purchasing, and supplier-management people who are adept at collaborating, negotiating, and motivating your valued suppliers.
  • Keep you supply chain processes efficient, nimble, and structured around best practices. Are the purchasing requests efficiently captured and communicated to the purchasing team? Is the purchasing team on top of any open or late POs to the suppliers? Are there untapped or underutilized tools and functions in your existing ERP system that can reveal opportunities to enhance supply chain efficiency? Is the stockroom easily and speedily identifying shortages and communicating them quickly to the purchasing team? Delays and inefficiencies in these and related activities lead to constrained cash flow and money being tied up in inventory versus being utilized for business growth. In these times, the impact to your business is much greater.
  • Speaking of stock, can you afford to stockpile? I know this is a business decision that might make you look like a genius (if doing so saves the day, at some point) — or a fool (if the company is left holding a lot of inventory for a customer who decides to cancel the order). But it warrants appropriate soul-searching especially when your major customer circuit board assembly orders are on the line and the pressure is on from your customers to buy the inventory.
  • Take this time and make a small investment to revisit the critical language in your contracts. For example, no one wins when a “Force de Majeure” clause is invoked, but are there ways to share risks with your customers, such as your customer pre-paying for the inventory, putting agreements in place to address Purchase Price Variances in the PO due to component price fluctuations between the time PO was placed and when the component orders are placed.
  • Deal with the problem parts up front. Gone are the days when your supply chain team could start with the first component on the BOM and work their way down the purchasing list. Now, upfront “surgery” of the BOM is critical. What the most problematic parts? At what volumes? Do you need to collaborate with the customer to locate some of the parts? Do they have a direct line to the manufacturer that you may not have? Are they willing to cover any price variances that creep up after the PO is placed? Or will you be left holding the bag if the price of a component goes up between the time of quote/PO is received and when the order is actually placed (my earlier point above)? How far ahead of the customer PO delivery can you place the order for the BOM? “Just in time” worked Pre-Covid. But now, it’s a risk that your order may go unfulfilled, leaving you with stuck inventory and an unhappy customer who is wondering why the BOM was not ordered for a job that was to be delivered 6 months out. The answer to that question used to be simple: “We run our purchasing efficiently using JIT!” Well, that’s no longer a sure path to success. To the contrary, it’s become a path to unfulfilled customer expectations and potential loss of business.
  • Broaden your supplier list. Whether the goal is to increase the sheer number, type, or capability-sets of your suppliers – now is the time to examine how deep your bench is. (This is especially true as it relates to hard-to-find electronic components.) In the past, contract OEMs like CST could rely on the large component suppliers/distributors to find the components and avoid the “secondary market.” But as these large firms will likely face the same duress in a recession, it behooves us all to reach out across the supplier base ourselves to find those tricky-to-find components and materials we need: Plenty of solid, smaller suppliers are out there and just waiting to be found!
  • Don’t forget that YOUR team and people will make the difference in difficult days. If you haven’t acknowledged your top performers lately, this is a good time to do so. Remind your team members that they are valued. Small gestures count. Put in extra care as a leader to ensure that your team is having fun at work, that they are enjoying what they do, that team issues are addressed immediately (do not let them fester!). After all is said and done, it’s about the people.
  • Finally, remember that times of change, upheavals, and challenges are also the times when opportunities present themselves. This is when your potential customers become your committed customers. This is when your current customers reaffirm their loyalty to you — because you solved their problems, ensured their critical business wasn’t interrupted, and made sure your company was delightful to work with even during the hardest of times. And, again, remember (and reward) those who worked to solve those challenges: Your team members.

This is what it comes down to at the end. Those who are paranoid might be the ones who emerge on the other side, stronger. Difficult times present opportunities. These are the times when the winners and losers will be decided and when market gains will be made and solidified.

–  Shantanu R. Gupta,
CEO, Cascade Systems Technology

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Biden Administration’s Infrastructure Plan: What’s in it for the electronics industry? https://cascadesystems.net/bidens-infrastructure-plan-whats-in-it-for-the-electronics-industry/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=bidens-infrastructure-plan-whats-in-it-for-the-electronics-industry https://cascadesystems.net/bidens-infrastructure-plan-whats-in-it-for-the-electronics-industry/#respond Mon, 10 May 2021 14:19:28 +0000 https://cascadesystems.net/?p=914 On March 31, President Biden announced the Administration’s approximately $2 trillion infrastructure spending plan to the public, the virtues of which the President is promoting and the merits of which members of Congress are duly debating. Putting aside the dollars being contemplated, how the spending will be funded, where investments should be targeted, and which […]

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On March 31, President Biden announced the Administration’s approximately $2 trillion infrastructure spending plan to the public, the virtues of which the President is promoting and the merits of which members of Congress are duly debating.

Putting aside the dollars being contemplated, how the spending will be funded, where investments should be targeted, and which side of the political spectrum one falls on – all formidable topics worthy of analysis in their own right — there has long been agreement in D.C. that some sizeable investment in our nation’s infrastructure is necessary to keep America competitive in the decades ahead and to improve our quality of life both now and well into the future.

Moreover, today there appears to be cross-the-aisle acknowledgement that economic woes associated with the pandemic have lent new urgency and momentum to the concept.

Rather than dive into the plan’s details — for that, I suggest you review the Administration’s own write-up or read the summations of reputable media (for instance the New York Times analysis of the Biden plan) — I thought I might offer a couple of observations from the perspective of a technologist and a member of the electronics industry.

  1. Whatever the final size of the plan, the electronics sector stands to gain from its implementation. Whether we’re supplying electronic vehicles, unmanned vehicles, or systems that make for smarter rail, air, and maritime infrastructure envisioned in the plan; developing the AI and sensor technology that will empower the plan’s next-gen energy systems; or delivering the advances that will manifest the smart-buildings President Biden’s plan envisions… The electronics industry will be critical to — and benefit from — the amped up spending being contemplated in the halls of power (Just think of all the electronics that’ll be needed in tomorrow’s “smart cities.”).The upside will be even more impressive if, as President Biden’s current plan suggests, the final spending includes anything like the $50 billion targeted for building a much needed and resilient U.S. semiconductor industry. I’ll have more to say about this important topic in my next blog!
  2. Electronics companies will be driven by and see opportunities at all stages of the plan’s implementation. The term “infrastructure” often brings to mind images of tangible end-results: newly paved roads, shiny new airports, new cell towers and wind turbines rising from the horizon. But if you also think of infrastructure as a chronological process, its implications and impact are even more considerable.
    • Just consider how much computing power, R&D, problem solving, and electronics-driven collaboration will be needed to design, devise, develop, scope-out, and visualize forthcoming infrastructure projects before a shovel even touches the soil.
    • Next, think of all the electronics involved during the construction phase (e.g. mobile communications used by construction crews, electronics on-board today’s increasingly sophisticated equipment and machinery, etc.)
    • Then, ponder the electronics-rich technology and functionality embedded in the infrastructure itself (e.g. IoT enabled utility meters, smart waste bins that advise consumers on what’s compostable and recyclable, GPS-guided construction, emergency response, and rail control).
    • Last, but certainly not least, imagine the benefits once this newly deployed infrastructure is actually in place! From rural communities that are connected and accessible as never before — to urban centers powered by clean, sustainable energy… Infrastructure investments made now will have a compounding effect and yield untold future opportunities for U.S. competitiveness and companies who drive it.
  3. Technologists can play an active role in forwarding infrastructure spending! Again, regardless of your political bent or view on funding President Biden’s plan — I fervently believe, as I’ve outlined above, that now is the time to:
    • invest in R&D and new products that meet the needs related to next-gen infrastructure;
    • beef up business development, sales, and marketing activities that will be bring new, infrastructure-suitable products/services to market;
    • actively stay informed about infrastructure opportunities, activities, and contracts in your segment, region, or locality – so you can bid on work to be performed, capture supply contracts, and provide the “smart” infrastructure that’ll be put in place;
    • get involved in, and engage with, coalitions, governmental bodies, exploratory committees, standards-writing organizations, trade-group initiatives, and other activities that will inevitably drive or guide RFQs, scoping documents, and spending;
    • and, most of all, lend your support and your voice to the cause by reaching out to your local, State, and Federal representatives — and letting the powers that be know you support the effort to rebuild and re-energize America’s infrastructure.

My belief is that President Biden’s plan will provide massive opportunities for electronics businesses like Cascade Systems Technology, our suppliers, and our customers.

If you concur and would like to brainstorm ways to leverage and seize these opportunities, let me know! CST has a host of services that can help customers bring infrastructure-ready products to market, and we’d love to partner-up with others in our sector to help make America stronger and more competitive!

And, don’t forget to check back again next month or so, when I’ll weigh in on the importance of strengthening our semiconductor supply infrastructure, in particular!

–  Shantanu R. Gupta,
CEO, Cascade Systems Technology

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