By 1979, Personal
Computers were available and showed promise for industrial application and home
use. Businesses already had their data on mainframe computers and personal
computers were being designed to interface with the mainframe. PC components
were being developed to expand memory, processing speed and portability.
In 1979, US
electronics companies were exporting electronic devices across the globe. The
foreign countries we exported to were requiring US companies to move
manufacturing to their countries and were beginning to lower their corporate
taxes. Europe imposed ISO-9000
manufacturing process standards as a trade barrier in 1987. US companies were
required to adhere to these standards in order to continue exporting.
In the 1980s, the US
military was developing stealth technology, communications satellites, radar
jammers and unmanned aircraft. The Reagan “build-up” was underway. Telephony
was also being redesigned and added to the multiple design cycles to create a
“boom” in electronics in the US.
In 1986, I left Hayes
Microcomputer Products to join Electromagnetic Sciences to join the Reagan
build-up surge.
In 1987, I joined the
American Electronics Association Board in Atlanta. Atlanta Metro was home to 50 electronics
companies and all were AEA members. The board included a cross section of
companies.
With the passage of
NAFTA and US implementation of UN Agenda 21 in 1993, the AEA was shifting its
focus from US companies to emphasize globalization. I remained on the board
until 1995.
I was asked to open a
private consulting practice in 1993 by 6 electronics companies. That practice
eventually included 46 companies, mostly electronics manufacturing firms.
US electronics
companies were off-shoring circuit board manufacturing to lower costs. This
required that sustaining engineering be performed by other countries.
Components were routinely obsoleted and this required redesign around
components that were still being sold. The savings for off-shoring was 50%. Companies
knew they would need to allow foreign engineers access to their closely guarded
design documentation.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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