What caught your eye? (AI chip design, Intel 14A, Satellite services)

This week we’re talking about AI for chip design, Intel considering a focus on its 14A foundry process, and the use of satellite data for public services…

The Electronics Weekly team share some fingerposts – their picks of the week, in terms of announcements, developments, product releases, quotes, or anything else in the wide world of electronics, that caught their eye…

Caroline Hayes, editor
Agentic and generative AI Siemens EDA portfolioAmong all the DAC stories, I think Siemens applies AI across chip and PCB design portfolio was the most significant, with Siemens applying AI components tailored for each of its tool suites according to application.

David Manners, components editor
Intel 14A foundry processWhat caught my eye this week was Intel saying it was considering dropping 18A as a foundry process to focus on 14A.


Alun Williams, web editor
UK Space Agency funds public services using satellite dataWhat caught my eye was the UK Space Agency backing projects using satellite data for public services. The agency is making £2.5 million available to five projects that range from tracking tiny movements in buildings and sustainable farming to accounting for greenhouse gases, and a biodiversity mapping tool…

But what caught your eye in the world of electronics this week? Leave a comment below.


Alun Williams

Web Editor of Electronics Weekly, he is the author of the Gadget Master, Eyes on Android and Electro-ramblings blogs and also covers space technology news. He has been working in tech journalism for worryingly close to thirty years. In a previous existence, he was a software programmer.

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