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OEM the Hope of African Product Developers

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Original equipment manufacturer (OEM) refers to companies that make products for others to repackage and sell. Resellers buy OEM products in bulk, without the expensive retail packaging (e.g. radio panel, computer mother boards, remote control board without the casing) that comes with independently sold pieces.

 

The product itself is essentially the same as its more costly, retail-packaged ones since the only difference is the packaging (casing). OEM products are used in many industries, but are perhaps most prevalent in electronics. OEM products depend on their ability to drive down the cost of production through economies of scale.

 

Normally, dealers of OEM products add something of value before repackaging and selling the products. An OEM vendor could build big product, sub-systems, or systems from many OEM parts. Also, using OEM allows the purchasing company to obtain needed components or products without owning and operating a factory. For example, OEM vendor could buy RFID tag reader and tags and then develops application for inventory control under a new brand making it a new system. OEM goods gives OEM vendor wide range of creativity as this leverage gives chances for more time for product development and a lot of intricacies are avoided.

 

In the computer industry, OEM software is an expression that refers to software that is sold to computer builders (Dell, Sony, Omatech etc) and hardware manufacturers (OEMs) in large quantities, for the purpose of bundling with computer hardware.

 

For electronics and embedded system designers especially in Africa, It is imperative for them to leverage on the opportunities OEM products offer. There is little or nothing coming out from Africa talking about original equipment production. This makes it difficult to get new products out quickly even when there are brilliant ideas. But OEM is the way out. The limited time and resources can now be channeled into real product development using suitable OEM products. Leveraging on OEM products will go a long way in helping African product developers rather than them re-inventing the wheel.

VC4Africa Meets at Paris – May 26

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VC4Africa is organizing a meetup in Paris to connect entrepreneurs with investors.

 

Café la Bombe – Paris

May 26 2011 7:00 PM – May 26 2011 10:00 PM

 

Second to networking online, VC4Africa makes use of the Barcamp model for organizing our very own VC4Africa Meetups. These are informal networking events initiated by any member in the network interested in bringing together members in their own area. These events are organized without a budget, agenda or speakers. It is exactly the community initiated format and informal structure that allows for effective networking.

 

“VC4Africa is the largest and fastest growing social network for investors and entrepreneurs dedicated to building sustainable businesses in Africa. Our business is connecting people and ideas. We are the only open and accessible platform dedicated to the subject and our members come from more than 250 countries” VC4Africa Founder

 

Mobile Phone : Few Years From Today – Why Android Will Disrupt The Market

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In few years to come, mobile phone marketplace will be dominated by smaller firms given a boost by Google Android open source operating system. Making Android an open source, Google has ultimately dropped market entry barriers to all handset manufacturers, who are now free to focus on design, hardware and quality at an attractive price range.  Google keeps doing what is best by creating disruptive technology and opening up new markets, then giving it away for free. I hope Africans will see opportunities in this and take the advantage of it. Exploit

 

Android brings the easiest pathway for an African player to become a phone manufacturer. The OS is the soul of phones and taking that trouble away, Google levels the playing field. It is our belief that Android will triumph over the competition.

 

Unfortunately, giving away Android could also disrupt Google as they are equipping their competitors.  The Nexus phone failed because there are better alternatives and most of them were enabled by Android. Do not be worried, iPhone, though popular, will not penetrate into most emerging markets and developing markets. It is just not the model of Apple.

 

There is an Android phone of N25,000 in Nigeria now. That means, in few years, we could get Android phones that will compete with Nokia in price. That will be disruption and opportunity at the same time. It all depends which side of the aisle you are.

 

This post is adapted from TIF user exploit

Nanometer CMOS – The Challenges Ahead

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The invention of complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuit is a major milestone in the history of modern industry and commerce. It has driven revolutionary changes in computing due to its performance, cost and ease of integration. But as the size of the transistors scale down into the nanometer regime, so many challenges occur on the reliability and performance of the systems.

 

Signal integrity and power problems are noticeably among the major ones. In the past few decades, the advancement of the chip performance has come through increased integration and complexity on the number of transistors on a die. Though supply and threshold voltages have been scaled for every CMOS generation, the power dissipation and interconnect noise have continued to increase. This trend is costly in terms of shorter battery life, complex cooling and packaging methods, and degradation of system performance.

 

Power dissipation in CMOS circuits involves both static and dynamic power dissipations. In the submicron technologies, the static power dissipation, caused by leakage currents and subthreshold currents contribute a small percentage to the total power consumption, while the dynamic power dissipation, resulting from charging and discharging of parasitic capacitive loads of interconnects and devices dominates the overall power consumption.

 

But as technologies scale down to the nanometer regime (ultra deep submicron (UDSM)), the static power dissipation becomes more dominant than the dynamic power consumption. And despite the aggressive downscaling of device dimensions and reductions of supply voltages, which reduce the power consumption of the individual transistors, the exponential increase of operating frequencies results in a steady increase of the total power consumption.

 

Interconnect noise and delay emanate during distribution of on chip signals and clocks using local, intermediate and global wires. Introduction of repeaters on the interconnect paths mitigate the effect of delay at the expense of chip area and power consumption. With technology downscaling, interconnect resistance and capacitance increases the propagation delay. As the cross section of chip interconnect is reduced, the resistance per unit length is increased. Closer routing and wire reduction have increased chip interconnect capacitance and resistance effects respectively.

 

The relationships between interconnect delay and technology show that downscaling of feature size increases circuit propagation delay. It is evident that as the technology scales, the gate delay decreases but with increase in interconnect delay. At around 0.12um technology, the interconnect delay has become exceedingly dominant over the gate delay. This increase is worrisome to chip designers in the quest for continuous circuit miniaturization and denser integration in CMOS technology.

 

The International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductor (ITRS) 2005 forecasts continuous reduction in feature size to be alive and well into the future. With this continuous scaling, if interconnect noise and power dissipation, especially the static power dissipation, are not controlled and optimised, they promise to become major limiting factors for system integration and performance improvement.