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Editorial:
Paul Jay Previews "Photonics North"
... Canada has been helping lead the photonics revolution (which includes LEDs) for decades, but with recent downtimes, we haven't heard much from the land of the Mounties. Compound semi industry veteran Dr. Paul Jay is helping change that. As executive director of the Canadian Photonics Consortium, Paul is helping... Read the editorial...
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it's all there!
The
2010-2011 Summit Series is ready to succeed... are you?
After the successful 2008 launch and 2009/2010
expansion of Solid State Lighting Design's
SSL Summit in New Jersey, the feedback remains consistent: Just what we
needed, do it again soon. The Summit brings together lighting decision makers
with industry thought leaders, pioneers, and innovators from the across the
solid state lighting eco-system. Read
the 2009 conference report...
Following our changes in 2009, 2010-2011 will
continue to be all about quality, quality, quality.Showcase
participants and sponsors are vetted to separate the wheat from the chaff
(have your IES LM-79 test reports ready!). The 2010-2011 Summit includes NY/NJ
in September and LA/Long Beach next January. Look into the series information
at www.SSLsummit.com for the details.
Sponsorships are available for the full series.
Agilent to Sell Semiconductor Business and Its Stake in Lumileds CompoundSemi News Staff
August 15, 2005...Agilent Technologies of Palo Alto, California USA, announced it will sell its semiconductor business to Kohlberg Kravis
Roberts & Co and Silver Lake Partners for $2.66 billion. Company president
and CEO, William Sullivan said that the semiconductor business unit of agilent was half as profitable
as it should have been this year. The chip testing business posted a loss for
the quarter. The company will cut 1,300 of its 28,000 workers in the divested
units. The moves are expect to cost $200 million. Agilent will close 11 locations,
Chief Financial Officer Adrian Dillon said at a meeting with analysts in New
York. According to the company, the sale will close by Oct. 31, and Agilent
expects the divestiture will be largely completed by the middle of FY2006.
In addition to the sale of its semiconductor business, Agilent has agreed to sell
its 47% stake in Lumileds Lighting Inc., a maker of advanced LEDs of all colors (and a leading manufacturer of white LEDs) to its JV partner in Lumileds, Royal Philips Electronics NV of the Netherlands for approximately $950 million and $50 million in debt payoff. (Lumileds'
company news release) Lumileds was originally set up as a 50-50 partnership between Agilent and Lumileds. Lumileds employees hold approximately 3.5% of the original Agilent shares.
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Epistar and United Epitaxy of Taiwan to Merge LIGHTimes Staff
Lighting decision
makers deserve quality answers, not hype...
Join
key NY-area lighting and sustainability decision makers at the SSL
industry's quality-focused "insiders meet",
September 14-15 in New York City...
They
are looking for the keys to quality in LED lighting, and you can not
afford to miss it. Just one look at the special
guests and NY
Summit agenda, and you will know why you need to be there in September!
Building on the continuing success of this first-of-its-kind event,
the 2010/2011 Summit series will again deliver the highest quality
agenda and attendees in an unsurpassed networking environment. We
have expanded the Summit to "take it to the facilities decision
makers" in NY, and quality oriented suppliers need to be seen. See what you need to be part of at
www.SSLsummit.com
Toshiba Develops Special LED for Camera Flash Scott McMahan
August 11, 2005...Digital photography still can not always be perfect with just point-and-shoot.
White balance is still tricky, especially with a flash. If a regular flash goes
off there is often a bluish tint to the images. Toshiba has developed a special
LED for flashes used in cell phone cameras to help eliminate white balance problems
caused by camera flashes, according to a Nikkei Net news article.
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August 12, 2005...PicoQuant, a leading manufacturer of picosecond diode lasers headquartered in Berlin, Germany, has introduced four new pulsed UV-LEDs. According to the company, the PLS 280, PLS 295, PLS 310 and PLS 340 extend the available wavelength range and allow new applications in bioanalysis, biochemistry, genetics, optical storage, semiconductor characterization and quality control. The numbers associated with each pulsed LED product pertain to the wavelength of the devices.
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Interested
in general lighting, architectural applications or LED luminaire
product news?
While you're in exactly the right place for the broader LED industry
applications and supply chain news, general lighting products and
applications have moved over Solid State Lighting Design. See what
you've been missing today at www.SolidStateLightingDesign.com.
Color Kinetics Joins NGLIA LIGHTimes Staff
August 10, 2005...The Next Generation Lighting Industry Alliance, a program created with the passage
of the most recent USA energy bill on Monday, has gained a new member. Color Kinetics Inc.
of Boston, Massachusetts USA, has officially joined the Next Generation Lighting
Industry Alliance (NGLIA), an organization that partners with the U.S. Department
of Energy to accelerate the adoption of solid state lighting in general lighting
applications.
Color Kinetics also belongs to the National Electrical Manufacturers Association
(NEMA), which administers the NGLIA program. The NGLIA works in conjunction with
the U.S. Department of Energy’s Solid State Lighting Program to support
research and development and lobbying on behalf of solid state lighting issues.
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CI Displays Makes LED Backlighting Solutions
August 10, 2005...CI Displays of Holbrook, New York USA, a wholly owned subsidiary of Components
International, is now offering LED backlighting solutions for LCD and TFT displays.
The company which provides turnkey solutions for flat electronic display requirements,
offers both direct and edge-lit backlight LED systems for new or retrofit installations.
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Toyoda Gosei to Produce LED Headlights by 2008
August 9, 2005...A few auto makers such as Masarati and Ford have demonstrated LED-based headlights
in concept cars. None as yet are street-legal. A number of companies intend to
develop white LED chips and modules for this potentially lucrative application.
Toyoda Gosei of Tokyo, Japan plans to develop and market high intensity, white,
LED chips for automotive headlights by 2008. The LED-based headlights that will
replace halogen headlights currently used are more expensive, and at least initially
they will be limited to high-end cars. According to the Nikkei Net Interactivearticle,
the company expects to increase the efficiency of its white LED chips from their
current 40-50 lm/W up to 100 lm/W in 2008. The increased efficiency would allow
designers to create more compact headlights requiring few LED chips. Toyoda Gosei,
part of the Toyota Motor Corp group, hopes to leverage the group's name to help
its marketing activities.
Court Vindicates Cree LIGHTimes Staff
August 4, 2005...After over two years the court has finally dismissed the class action lawsuit
initiated by Cree’s former senior manager, Eric Hunter who alleged company
wrongdoing. The company announced that the United States District Court for the
Middle District of North Carolina, USA has dismissed "in its entirety with
prejudice" the consolidated class action complaint previously pending against
Cree and certain of its current and former directors and officers. The court's
dismissal applies to all of the plaintiffs and all of their claims that were still
pending from the actions originally filed on Friday, June 13, 2003.
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by the LIGHTimes staff writers.
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Commentary & Perspective...
Paul Jay Previews "Photonics North"
August 9, 2005...Canada has been helping lead the photonics revolution (which includes LEDs)
for decades, but with recent downtimes, we haven't heard much from the land of
the Mounties. Compound semi industry veteran Dr. Paul Jay is helping change
that. As executive director of the Canadian
Photonics Consortium, Paul is helping lead this trade association through
events and conferences that support the Canadian government's trade missions
in photonics. One of the goals of the conferences and trade missions is to devise Canada's strategy for photonics
developments, especially for photonics development related to healthcare applications. Canada's
initiatives provide an excellent role model for other countries, so I asked
Paul to share with our audience the consortium's mission by previewing Photonics
North, an upcoming symposium slated for September 12-14 in Toronto. HB-LEDs
and OLEDs are very much included in the event. To follow is Paul's report, peppered
with his unique communications style and upbeat humor...JMcD
So What Else Would Canada Do With Its Photonics Technology? by Paul Jay, Ph.D., Executive Director, Canadian
Photonics Consortium
The last few years have seen quite a regrowth of photonics activity as many
of the skill-sets nurtured in (and then downsized out of) the labs of Nortel,
JDS Uniphase, Bookham, etc. have now diffused into new applications sectors.
Teams of talented individuals are emerging in government labs, university research
teams, startup companies, and various established industries as new technology
opportunities are explored. A scan of the 300 plus papers in the program our
upcoming Photonics North
event, which will be held in Toronto Sept 12-14, 2005, shows precisely where
these new opportunities appear to be directed.
Three out of the nine sessions are packed with presentations on photonics in
biology, biosensors and medicine. Several of these papers come from teams working
with hospitals close to the University of Toronto, and reflect the energy and
leadership of Dr. Brian Wilson, who heads the Division of Biophysics and Bioimaging
at the Ontario Cancer Institute. Brian is also Professor of Medical Biophysics
at U of T and will be delivering one of the plenary talks at the conference.
His talk is titled Biophotonics: from Lab to Clinic and he will also
be the lunchtime speaker at the International Photonics Forum on Monday Sept
12th. Hopefully he will restrain himself from showing his slides of various
stages of surgery, out of respect for the luncheon guests!
Another of the plenary speakers reflects a Canadian business success story
that grows directly out of a biomedical photonics opportunity. Dr. Julia Levy
took an observed effect of light sensitive chemicals in naturally-occurring
cow parsley, and with some colleagues from the University of British Columbia
in Vancouver, founded QLT Inc., which has now become a world-leader in photodynamic
therapy. QLT's Visudyne therapy for age-related blindness received FDA
approval in April 2000. Julia will convey the excitement of cross-disciplinary
interactions between photonics experts and immunologists. Julia's type of reaction
is encountered frequently now as photonics specialists who had previously been
in the telecommunications sector find their experience of value in refreshingly
different contexts.
Just outside Quebec City, the National Optics Institute (NOI) is benefiting
from its proximity to Laval University to recruit some of the world-class graduates
and researchers from the well-developed optics and photonics programs in Laval's
Science and Engineering Faculties. Besides incubating successful startup companies
like Teraxion (advanced Bragg grating technology and dispersion compensation
devices), the NOI has also generated a major body of licensable intellectual
property (IP) in areas of collaboration, including: applications in the pulp
and paper industry, military, and security uses of photonics, and a recent
collaboration with the Food Research and Development Centre of Agriculture and
AgriFood Canada. This agriculture-sector project has demonstrated that an infrared
spectral absorption technique can clearly discriminate between two adjacent
vintages of a Shiraz red wine. How long will it be before a handheld LED-driven
version of that technique will become the 'must-have' gadget for oenophiles?
There is probably no shortage of volunteers for an exhaustive field trial of
the prototypes!
Despite the extensive cross-fertilization of photonics into other fields, Canada's
telecom sector continues to pursue significant advances in increasing the operational
cost-effectiveness of optical networks. The Canadian Natural Sciences and Engineering
Research Council (NSERC) recently funded a major joint project between several
Canadian Universities (McGill, McMaster, Ottawa, Queens, Toronto) and partner
companies (Nortel, JDS-Uniphase, BTI Photonics Systems Inc, Anritsu, Adtek Photomask,
and Telus) for a $7M (Cdn), 5-year program called All-Agile Photonic Networks.
While this project looks at some of the more far-reaching challenges, Ottawa-based
Tropic Networks recently landed almost $50M (Usd) of additional funding for
its development of ROADM (Reconfigurable Optical Add-Drop Multiplexing) solutions
to the challenge of routing data streams entirely within the optical domain.
Another good reason to attend Photonics North is the Monday Sept 12th
International Photonics Forum. This more business-focussed event highlights
a variety of international strategies and case-studies of new emerging applications
of photonics. In a session on Imaging & Display Technologies, speakers
from the UK, USA and Korea will address commercialization aspects of new displays...
and organic LED (OLED) technology features strongly here, offering multiple
advantages of lower cost, reduced power consumption and weight, together with
improved brightness and viewing angle. Organic emitters will also be featured
in a session on Solid State Lighting, with talks on product development
from Philips in Germany and Enfis in the UK, as well as a review of the technology
behind Dave Irvine-Halliday's incredible Calgary, Canada-based Light
up the World Foundation. The LUTW initiative aims to bring LED illumination
to thousands of non-electrified homes in developing countries around the world.
The Photonics North conference series has grown out of meetings initiated
in Quebec several years ago, and last year's Ottawa meeting attracted over 1100
delegates and 115 Exhibitors. This year's organizers are the Toronto-based OPTIC
Photonics Cluster, together with the Canadian Photonics Consortium (CPC) and
SPIE and we're targeting 1500 delegates and 150 exhibitors. Plans are already
underway for Photonics North 2006 in Quebec City next June. CPC is an industry-trade
association based in Ottawa, and provides a function that layers across the
various regional photonics clusters. This currently involves four clusters:
The Quebec Photonics Network, the Ottawa Photonics Cluster, the Ontario Photonics
Industry Cluster, and the Vancouver-based British Columbia Photonics Industry
Association. There is currently discussion addressing the possibility of creating
a mid-western Provinces cluster to reflect the growing deployment of photonics
in the thriving oil/gas industry sectors. The CPC function provides support
in coordination of the various regional industry needs, articulating these upwards
towards government policy discussions and outwards to help with international
liaison and trade missions.
Now is the time to get on-line and plan your trip to Toronto for this exciting
3-day event, 12-14 September. In case you need another excuse, it occurs during
the second week of the hugely successful Toronto
Film Festival! You could spend one week encased in dark movie theaters and
a second week celebrating ingenuity with light! I look forward to seeing you
all in September. If you'd like to contact me directly... I'm Paul Jay, Executive
Director of the Canadian Photonics Consortium. My tel in Canada is (613) 828
6274 ext 220 and my email is: pjay@photonics.ca
If you have questions about
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