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EDITOR'S PAGE

Data dump of the first order

What does Semicon West mean for a trade press editor? More hands shaken, business cards exchanged, faces recognized and forgotten, new product pitches received and presentations Powerpointed, notes taken, and shoe rubber burnt than at any other industry event during the year. It's a data dump of the first order, and it takes weeks, even months to assimilate the gigareams of information we receive. Postshow cogitation also offers a once-a-year opportunity to take the full measure of the semiconductor manufacturing industry, from the well-trod terrain of its economic condition and outlook to the ever-changing business strategies of its veteran players, to those bright-eyed techno-entrepreneurs who fuel the flames of innovation.

Market conditions dominated conversation at the show. Despite optimism based on tightened manufacturing capacities, spot shortages, and increased preorder activity from the chipmakers, no one can forecast exactly when business will truly start improving across the board. While advanced fabs may be getting better at monitoring the health of their equipment, predicting run-to-run variations, and tightly controlling processes, the same can't be said of the industry's ability to accurately predict the timing of the long-awaited upturn. Many variables, especially macroeconomic and geopolitical ones, have made semiconductor company executives extremely reticent to sign off on capital spending.

There did seem to be a growing consensus that if the chipmaking companies wait until the last minute (whenever that might be) to make their large-scale purchasing decisions, the enervated capital equipment and critical materials supply chain may not be able to support the speed of the resultant ramp-up. Recently anointed Applied Materials honcho Mike Splinter emphasized that the customers must be convinced of "having capacity in advance of the upturn." Three years of famine makes one hungry yet weak, after all.

Several companies I met with seemed rejuvenated and poised to capitalize on opportunities when the orders do start flooding in. The new management team at Therma-Wave, led by industry veteran Boris Lipkin, has cleaned house and more than tripled the number of customers ordering their products in recent months. They believe the company is ready to grab a large portion of what will be a $2 billion–plus market for its suite of integrated fabwide thin-film and lithography metrology tools. Said Lipkin: "Our customers want us to succeed."

Mattson, whose M&A binge at the start of the downturn nearly led to the company's collapse, has returned to its solid core of RTP and dry strip systems, reenergized its customer relations, streamlined its operations, and drastically improved its balance sheet. One linchpin of the Mattson strategy is razor-sharp technical expertise, underscored by what CEO and president Dave Dutton called a focus on "delivering what happens on the wafer surface."

Speaking of the wafer surface, two upstart companies' products look very closely at what goes on down there. Speedworks Software, one of 16 participants in the inaugural Technology Innovation Showcase, has developed a grain structure analysis (GSA) technique that uses spatial intelligence to extract process attributes from graphical images. According to sales and marketing director Jon Poreda, GSA allows the user to analyze and characterize the grain structure of a device layer in a matter of minutes, which then helps optimize the process and improve productivity as well as yields.

HyperNex's AutoTex tool (codeveloped with IBM) also inspects microstructures on the wafer, providing process monitoring of crystallographic phase and texture. President Dave Kurtz noted that although off-line analyses prove that microstructures are a major driver of stress voids and other flaws in copper, analytical tools such as x-ray diffraction are slow and not fab ready. He says his company's system can augment those tools and play an effective process control and yield enhancement role in advanced interconnect applications.

One anecdote I heard suggested that the recovery has already started. As I munched on my crepe in the back corner of Moscone Center's South Hall, I shared a stand-up café table with an Intel engineer. During our chat, he said the water fountain had recently been turned back on at corporate—a sure sign that the upturn had begun.

Let the orders start to flow.

Tom Cheyney
Editor

tom.cheyney@cancom.com


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