Contact Information: PRESS CONTACTS (For Editors Only): MEMS Industry Group Karen Lightman Phone: 412/390-1644 Email: Vetrano Communications Maria Vetrano Phone: 617/876-2770 Email:
Mobile Phones, Video Game Controllers, Medical Devices, Industrial Sensing Driving MEMS Industry
Nokia, Sun, Microsoft Talk With MEMS Business Execs at MEMS Executive Congress in Monterey
| Quelle: MEMS Industry Group
PITTSBURGH, PA--(Marketwire - December 2, 2008) - According to Roger Meike, director of Sun
Microsystems Labs' Project Sun SPOT, "the next cool thing" could combine
MEMS accelerometers, light and temperature sensors in new classes of
applications that interact with the real world. Should the next generation
of inventors use the Java-based Project Sun SPOT (Small Programmable Object
Technology) to build those devices, so much the better, said Meike to
attendees of MEMS Executive Congress®, held November 5-7 in Monterey, CA.
Noting Yole Développement's MEMS market projections for 2012, director of
Nokia Research Center's Cambridge, UK laboratory, Dr. Tapani Ryhänen, asked
whether surging demand for mobile devices is largely responsible for
projected growth in accelerometers, radio frequency (RF) MEMS and silicon
microphones. Microsoft hardware researcher Mike Sinclair declared this "the
decade of physical interactivity" while talking about the importance of
gesture recognition at Microsoft and the company's interest in a slew of
MEMS devices -- microphones, accelerometers, gyroscopes and RF switches,
especially for mobile phones and displays. And for acclaimed video game
developer Jack McCauley, having a foundry that can produce millions of
devices and ramp mass production in four months is critical to a company's
selection of MEMS. McCauley stated that such mass production is no longer a
concern in the video game industry, adding that "the three largest consumer
electronics controllers for video games now have a MEMS device in them."
More than 150 executives from in and around the MEMS industry interacted
with Meike, Ryhänen, Sinclair, McCauley and others at MEMS Executive
Congress, a two-day conference exploring the commercial successes of MEMS
across application areas.
Conference panelists also took a closer look at how MEMS is enabling low
power, energy monitoring and conservation. Texas Instruments' VP of
worldwide strategic marketing, Mark Denissen, talked about the importance
of low power in the emerging category of pico projectors, a promising
application space in which TI's DLP® Technology is playing well. Denissen
also drew a link between real-time sensors and data logging for healthcare:
"For diseases like heart disease and diabetes, MEMS-based data loggers are
needed to sense key attributes like pressure, motion, flowrate and
chemicals. Getting power down supports meaningful data collection."
Crossbow's chief architect, Ralph Kling, described a future in which
"metrics for sensor power consumption and energy harvesters are improving
to a point of infinite battery life" -- an achievement which should delight
consumers and manufacturers alike.
MEMS research analysts shared recent market data, while acknowledging
shifts influenced by the larger economy. Marlene Bourne, principal of
Bourne Research, said that the "MEMS industry has enjoyed a good ride, with
20 years of growth," adding that the 3-4% growth we will see in 2008 is
reflective of the times. Jérémie Bouchaud, principal analyst for MEMS at
iSuppli, claimed that consumer electronics and mobile phones will largely
contribute to a growing MEMS market, which he expects will reach $8B in
2012. Bouchaud added that automotive, while suffering now, should rebound
by Q4 2009. Jean-Christophe Eloy, founder and general manager of Yole
Développement, is looking at a much bigger total MEMS market, predicting
$15B by 2012 with drug delivery systems and RF MEMS growing most rapidly.
Karen Lightman, managing director of MEMS Industry Group, the industry
organization hosting MEMS Executive Congress, said, "While MEMS will likely
grow at a more modest pace in 2009, it's actually well positioned during
these challenging economic times. Relative to competitive technologies,
MEMS reduces cost and power and preserves small size -- making it ideally
suited for consumer electronics, mobile phones, home healthcare devices and
a host of other applications."
About MEMS Executive Congress
MEMS Executive Congress is an annual event hosted by MEMS Industry Group,
the trade association representing the MEMS and microstructures industries.
The Congress is a unique professional forum at which executives from
companies designing and manufacturing MEMS technology sit side-by-side with
their end-user customers to discuss commercial uses of MEMS in consumer
goods, energy/environmental, industrial, medical and telecom.
Sponsors of MEMS Executive Congress 2008 included: Analog Devices, Brewer
Science, EV Group, Freescale Semiconductor, IceMOS Technology, Marketwire,
Maxim Integrated Products, Micralyne, Okmetic, Plan Optik, SCHOTT
Electronic Packaging, Surface Technology Systems (STS), SUSS MicroTec,
SVTC, Tegal Corporation and Tronics Microsystems SA.
MEMS Executive Congress will be held again November 4-6, 2009 at The Lodge
at Sonoma in Sonoma, CA. For more information, please contact MIG via
phone: 412/390-1644, email: info@memsindustrygroup.org or Web:
www.memscongress.com.
About MEMS Industry Group
MEMS Industry Group is the trade association representing the MEMS and
microstructures industries. The Association enables the exchange of
non-proprietary information among members; provides reliable industry data
that furthers the development of technology; and works toward the greater
commercial development and use of MEMS and MEMS-enabled devices. More than
80 companies comprise MIG, including Analog Devices, Applied Materials,
Bosch, Draper Laboratory, Freescale, GE Global Research and GE Sensing,
Honeywell, IBM, Intel, Kionix, Nanoshift, OMRON, Sand 9,
STMicroelectronics, and Texas Instruments. For more information visit
www.memsindustrygroup.org.
MEMS Executive Congress is a registered trademark of MEMS Industry Group.
All other product and company names are trademarks or registered trademarks
of their respective holders.