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Accent lays off engineers in Italy, expands in Shanghai
According to one report the lay-offs include 10 engineers at the Vimercate office, two in the Pavia office and seven engineers from the Genova office. These 19 redundancies are out of a total number of 66 engineers involved in design activities.
The same report said that 2008 was Accent's best year in terms of financial results since its founding in 1993, with revenues of more than 18 million euro (more than $24 million).
Accent, which includes former ST boss Pasquale Pistorio and EDA guru Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli on its board of directors, announced the opening of a design and operations center in Shanghai, China, on Feb. 9. "We are very excited about the opening of our Shanghai office and see this as another important milestone of Accent's ongoing growth," Federico Arcelli, CEO of Accent, said in statement issued at the time. The statement did not say how many staff or how many engineers Accent planned to hire in Shanghai. "This opening will also enable Accent to fully capitalize on design and manufacturing capabilities available in Asia for the benefit of our customers worldwide," Arcelli was quoted as saying.
Accent's Italian workers have proposed short-time working with a proportional decrease in salaries as a means for the company to reduce its costs while preserving engineering jobs.
It is understood that engineers have taken strike action and a meeting between the engineers and management is scheduled for Wednesday (May 6). An Italian language blog can be found at www.accent-genova.blogspot.com.
Pistorio, ASV join board of design company
A panel discusses 65-nm mixed-signal design
HDL design methods for low-power implementation
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This month Keithley Instruments is giving away two of its Model 2200 power supplies, worth 735 Euros each, for EETimes Europe's readers to win. The Model 2200-20-5: 20V, 5A, 100W on offer is one of five general-purpose programmable DC power supplies recently launched by the company, designed for source measurement instruments for component, module, and device characterization and test applications.
Part of the Series 2200 family, the unit’s voltage output accuracy is specified at 0.03% and its current output accuracy is 0.05%. The supply’s high output (1mV) and measurement (0.1mA) resolution makes it well-suited for characterizing low power circuits and devices in applications such as measuring idle mode and sleep mode currents to confirm devices can meet today’s ever-more-challenging goals for energy efficiency.
And the winners are:
In our previous reader offer, EPC was giving away ten of its EPC9002 development board kits, worth USD 95 each.
Lucky winners include I. Blythe and C. Hardman from the UK, M. Casartelli and D. Cogliati from Italy, C. Cossio from Spain, W. Milarch from Germany, r. Milewicz from Poland, M. Prascak from Slovakia, A. Raidl from Austria and M. Taslakov from Bulgaria.
All should be receiving their kits soon. Let's wish them some interesting findings with their projects.
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This site contains articles under license from EETimes Group , a division of United Business Media LLC.



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