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Electronics Week

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Electronics Week
TitleElectronics Week
FrequencyWeekly
CategoryTechnology magazine

Electronics Week is a trade periodical covering the electronics and semiconductor industries, with reporting on companies, products, standards, and markets. It provides news, analysis, product reviews, and features that intersect with the activities of firms and institutions across the supply chain. The publication has been cited in industry debates, referenced by professional societies, and used by engineers, managers, and policymakers.

History

Electronics Week was founded amid consolidation in the electronics press during the late 20th century, arising alongside titles that tracked developments at Intel Corporation, Texas Instruments, IBM, Motorola Solutions, and Sony. Its early reporting chronicled milestones such as the rise of CMOS processes at Fairchild Semiconductor, the growth of fabrication at TSMC, and corporate moves involving Advanced Micro Devices, NXP Semiconductors, and STMicroelectronics. Coverage in the 1990s intersected with events like mergers involving National Semiconductor and Analog Devices, patent disputes referenced to United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, and standards work taking place at IEEE. In the 2000s the magazine reported on the expansion of supply chains to regions including Shenzhen and facilities operated by Samsung Electronics, while documenting ecosystem shifts involving ARM Holdings, Qualcomm, and cloud providers such as Amazon Web Services.

Publication and Distribution

Electronics Week has been published in print and online formats, with distribution channels that have included partnerships with trade shows like Electronica (trade fair), reseller networks servicing firms such as Digi-Key Electronics and Mouser Electronics, and syndication to institutional subscribers including MIT research groups and corporate R&D labs at Sony Corporation and Panasonic Corporation. Circulation strategies mirrored practices used by publishers such as Reed Exhibitions and Informa, while digital editions adopted content management systems and SEO tactics similar to those employed by TechCrunch and Wired (magazine). Distribution models have negotiated licensing and vendor relationships involving LexisNexis and academic aggregators like EBSCO.

Editorial Content and Sections

Regular sections have included industry news, product reviews, standards tracking, and market analysis. Columns frequently referenced developments at European Telecommunications Standards Institute and regulatory actions by bodies like Federal Communications Commission and European Commission. The reviews section compared products from suppliers including Analog Devices, Maxim Integrated, Infineon Technologies, and Microchip Technology. Technical features explored topics such as printed circuit board design innovations from firms like Cadence Design Systems and Mentor Graphics, and semiconductor node scaling exemplified by roadmaps publicized by International Roadmap for Devices and Systems contributors. The magazine ran tutorials aligned with institutions such as Carnegie Mellon University and Stanford University and used benchmarking methodologies reminiscent of work at National Institute of Standards and Technology.

Impact and Reception

Electronics Week influenced purchasing decisions and policymaking by reporting on supply-chain disruptions affecting corporations such as Apple Inc., Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., and Huawei. Its investigative pieces have been cited in analyses by think tanks including Brookings Institution and used as background by journalists at The Wall Street Journal and Financial Times. Academic citations sometimes referenced its market-data tables in studies at UC Berkeley and Georgia Institute of Technology. Reception among professional communities such as Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers members and attendees of DesignCon varied, with praise for technical depth alongside criticism when coverage intersected with contested patent cases involving Broadcom Inc. and Qualcomm Incorporated.

Notable Contributors and Interviews

Contributors have included former industry executives, academic researchers, and analysts associated with organizations like Bell Labs, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, and Sandia National Laboratories. High-profile interviews have featured executives from Intel Corporation, NVIDIA, TSMC, ARM Ltd., and Sony Corporation, as well as researchers from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Cambridge, and ETH Zurich. Guest columns have been authored by figures who have worked at Bell Labs and startups spun out of research at Harvard University and Caltech.

Events and Awards

Electronics Week organized or partnered on events patterned after trade conferences such as Semicon West and Embedded World, hosting panels with representatives from Applied Materials and KLA Corporation. The magazine sponsored awards recognizing innovation in areas similar to prizes given by IEEE societies and regional industry groups; recipients have included startups incubated at Y Combinator and established firms like Analog Devices for product excellence. Its conference programs often ran alongside exhibitions in Munich and San Francisco, attracting attendees from corporations such as Texas Instruments and NXP Semiconductors.

Category:Electronics magazines