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How to Build Obsolescence‑Resistant Systems in an Era of Rapid Tech Change

eetimes.com 2026-05-01
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semiconductor obsolescencesystem designsupply chain managementautomotive electronicsavionicsdefense electronicslong lifecyclecomponent end-of-lifeFPGAmemory technologychip manufacturingsupply chain risk
News Summary
In the semiconductor industry, rapid innovation, shrinking product life cycles, and volatile supply chains have made component obsolescence an unavoidable challenge. Long-lifecycle sectors such as aut... Read original →
Industry Analysis
As TSMC and NVIDIA push 3nm EUV nodes, their rapid cadence inadvertently starves automotive and defense sectors of legacy components like DDR3/4 and PowerPC. This obsolescence ripple now forces EDA vendors—Siemens in particular—to embed 'lifecycle-aware' design checks that anticipate package or test-platform sunsetting. Regulatory pressure is mounting: U.S. export controls combined with the EU’s new Critical Infrastructure Chip Resilience Act compel OEMs to formally qualify authorized aftermarket suppliers like Rochester Electronics, inflating compliance overhead. In response, GUC and Wiwynn are bundling HBM with embedded flash IP to lock in decade-long industrial contracts. Over the next 18 months, a counter-Moore trend will emerge—fierce competition for mature-node capacity, granting IDMs with analog/RF and embedded non-volatile memory capabilities disproportionate pricing power.
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