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	<title>History of the Electric Light Bulb &#187; Same Old Story</title>
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		<title>Changing the Light Bulb: Fast Growth in Once-Staid Industry: By EVAN RAMSTAD and KATHRYN KRANHOLD</title>
		<link>http://electriclane.wordpress.com/2008/01/07/changing-the-light-bulb-fast-growth-in-once-staid-industry-by-evan-ramstad-and-kathryn-kranhold/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Jan 2008 20:05:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>howardelliot</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[History of the Light Bulb: Stephen Wirtz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Same Old Story]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[WSJ.com &#8211; http://online.wsj.com/article_print/SB114973417663874578.html
1 of 3 6/12/2006 9:51 AM
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>WSJ.com &#8211; http://online.wsj.com/article_print/SB114973417663874578.html<br />
1 of 3 6/12/2006 9:51 AM<br />
DOW JONES REPRINTS<br />
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Coke&#8217;s ad in Times Square.<br />
June 8, 2006<br />
Changing the Light Bulb<br />
Changing the Light Bulb<br />
Fast Growth in Once-Staid Industry<br />
By EVAN RAMSTAD and KATHRYN KRANHOLD<br />
June 8, 2006; Page B1<br />
The future of lighting is in chips.<br />
Light-emitting diodes &#8212; those tiny, chip-based lights that for years have<br />
served as the power indicator on stereos and coffee-makers &#8212; are<br />
shaking up the global lighting industry like nothing since fluorescent bulbs emerged just after World War<br />
II.<br />
The spread of LEDs into a wider array of products poses new challenges for Philips Electronics NV,<br />
of Amsterdam; Siemens AG&#8217;s Osram unit, based in Munich, Germany; and General Electric Co., of<br />
Fairfield, Conn. The three have dominated every step of making a light bulb, from tungsten mining to retail<br />
promotions, for more than a century. But the LED arena is wide open, with the big multinationals going<br />
up against start-up manufacturers in core chip technology and against niche producers of finished<br />
products &#8212; far more competition than they faced in traditional lighting.<br />
A traditional light bulb uses an electrified wire filament in a vacuum tube. An<br />
LED, on the other hand, is a semiconductor chip that, when zapped with<br />
electricity, emits light. The color of the light depends on the material at the<br />
base of the chip. Like computer chips, LEDs can be very small &#8212; several<br />
could fit on fingernail &#8212; and they can be programmed by software to light<br />
up, for example, a stadium scoreboard.<br />
Such flexibility first pushed LEDs into applications where traditional bulbs<br />
wouldn&#8217;t work. Now, high-power LEDs are taking the place of bulbs,<br />
showing up in cellphones, cars, televisions and elsewhere in homes, the light<br />
bulb&#8217;s stronghold.<br />
LEDs consume less electricity than many other types of lights and last longer<br />
than most &#8212; around 10 years or so. Like other types of chips, their cost is<br />
falling and performance is improving as manufacturers make advances in<br />
materials and factory processes. &#8220;It&#8217;s going to open up and revolutionize the<br />
way we use and think about lighting,&#8221; says Robert Steele, an analyst with Strategies Unlimited, a U.S.<br />
market-research firm that specializes in LEDs.<br />
WSJ.com &#8211; Changing the Light Bulb http://online.wsj.com/article_print/SB114973417663874578.html<br />
2 of 3 6/12/2006 9:51 AM<br />
Miami Dolphins&#8217; end-zone screen<br />
Cellphones are the biggest new LED market, lighting up keypads and liquid crystal displays. (Computer<br />
screens, in contrast, rely on fluorescent bulbs for light.) Sales of high-brightness LEDs, the kind used in<br />
the new products, are estimated to be $4 billion to $5 billion this year. Sales are expected to hit $10<br />
billion by the end of the decade.<br />
Among the new applications fueling LED growth: Drivers of the new Ford Motor Co. Mustang can use<br />
the &#8220;MyColor&#8221; feature to change the color of the lighting on their LED-laden dashboard. (A small line of<br />
red, green and blue LEDs can, in varying combinations, produce 125 colors.) Boeing Corp. plans to use<br />
LEDs throughout the interior of its new 787 Dreamliner commercial jet, creating lighting environments that<br />
are supposed to help international travelers adjust to time-zone changes. Owners of a Louisville, Ky.,<br />
restaurant, Proof On Main, eliminated dangling light bulbs and replaced them with LED lighting that<br />
changes from amber in the morning to violet late at night. Already, some traffic signals in cities in the U.S.<br />
and China use LED fixtures that switch between red, yellow and green, instead of separate colored<br />
bulbs.<br />
Philips is selling flameless candles, with LEDs providing the<br />
&#8220;flickering&#8221; light source. It also is experimenting with LED-based lights<br />
in the shape of bulbs that fit into existing lamps and offer a twist:<br />
Squeezing or tapping the bulb turns it on or off, or makes it change<br />
color. (LEDs don&#8217;t get hot because they use so little energy.) And<br />
Philips is developing a remote-controlled LED room-lighting system.<br />
LEDs&#8217; rising influence is most visible in the growth of companies<br />
working on the basic technology. Philips Electronics&#8217; Lumileds, Nichia<br />
Chemical Corp. and Toyoda Gosei Co., of Japan, and Cree Inc., of Durham, N.C., produce LED chips<br />
and sell them to firms that build finished lights. In Asia, some packages for LED flashlights made by<br />
Energizer Holdings Inc. are marked &#8220;LED by Nichia&#8221; &#8212; a marketing ploy similar to the &#8220;Intel Inside&#8221;<br />
sticker on a computer.<br />
Some start-ups are establishing early leads in market niches. Canada&#8217;s Carmanah Technologies Corp.<br />
married LEDs with solar panels for marine buoys. It later expanded into aviation, selling easy-installation<br />
runway lights to the U.S. military in Afghanistan and elsewhere.<br />
The technology has driven Daktronics Inc. of Brookings, S.D., the largest U.S. maker of scoreboards,<br />
into other types of outdoor signs, including some in New York&#8217;s Times Square and London&#8217;s Piccadilly<br />
Circus. And LEDs have replaced incandescent light bulbs on many high school scoreboards. &#8220;It&#8217;s a much<br />
more cost-effective and much better energy source,&#8221; says Chief Executive Jim Morgan.<br />
Daktronics has edged ahead of an Asian rival, Lighthouse Technologies, of Hong Kong, in a race to<br />
make the biggest LED screen. Two months ago, Daktronics unveiled a 50-foot-high by 140-foot-wide<br />
screen for Dolphin Stadium in Miami, beating Lighthouse&#8217;s 132-foot screen, which sits above touristy<br />
Nathan Road in Hong Kong.<br />
A GE engineer, Nick Holonyak Jr., built the first LED in 1962, and the company patented the discovery.<br />
Among the first big uses for LEDs were calculators, and manufacturer Hewlett-Packard Co. eventually<br />
bought GE&#8217;s patent.<br />
WSJ.com &#8211; Changing the Light Bulb http://online.wsj.com/article_print/SB114973417663874578.html<br />
3 of 3 6/12/2006 9:51 AM<br />
Philips Electronics&#8217; LED light &#8216;bulbs&#8217; change color when squeezed.<br />
But the technology remained on the<br />
fringes of industry for decades.<br />
Nichia and Cree changed that in the<br />
1990s by broadening the LED color<br />
palette, which previously had been<br />
limited to red, yellow and green. The<br />
breakthrough came in 1993, when Nichia, Toyoda Gosei (part-owned by Toyota Motor Co.) and,<br />
soon afterward, Cree conquered blue, marking the final step to creating combinations that would fill out<br />
the color spectrum, including white.<br />
Major manufacturers took notice. In 1999, GE formed GELcore, a venture with chip maker Emcore<br />
Corp., to get back into the LED business. The joint venture is looking to develop the perfect-white<br />
lighting system, which could be used as general illumination in retail stores, industrial buildings and, some<br />
day, homes.<br />
&#8220;The game for us is white,&#8221; says Michael Petras, vice president of GE&#8217;s commercial- and<br />
industrial-lighting sales. &#8220;It&#8217;s the lighting market.&#8221;<br />
Nichia remains the biggest force in overall production of LED chips. Leading in the production of<br />
high-powered chips are Osram Opto Semiconductors and Lumileds, a former joint venture of Philips<br />
Electronics and the Hewlett-Packard spinoff Agilent Technologies Inc. and now 100% owned by<br />
Philips. Gerard Kleisterlee, Philips&#8217;s CEO, says one need only look at the history of other electronics<br />
markets to know how varied the future may get.<br />
&#8220;We were founded around the manufacture of incandescent light, and that vacuum tube produced other<br />
vacuum tubes for radios and picture tubes for TVs,&#8221; Mr. Kleisterlee says. Radio tubes gave way to<br />
transistors, and TV tubes to liquid-crystal displays. &#8220;Now,&#8221; he says, &#8220;finally that same thing starts to<br />
happen to lighting.&#8221;<br />
Write to Evan Ramstad at evan.ramstad@wsj.com1 and Kathryn Kranhold at<br />
kathryn.kranhold@wsj.com2<br />
URL for this article:<br />
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB114973417663874578.html<br />
Hyperlinks in this Article:<br />
(1) mailto:evan.ramstad@wsj.com<br />
(2) mailto:kathryn.kranhold@wsj.com<br />
Copyright 2006 Dow Jones &amp; Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved<br />
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