-
-
News
News Highlights
- Books
Featured Books
- design007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current IssueLearning to Speak ‘Fab’
Our expert contributors clear up many of the miscommunication problems between PCB designers and their fab and assembly stakeholders. As you will see, a little extra planning early in the design cycle can go a long way toward maintaining open lines of communication with the fab and assembly folks.
Training New Designers
Where will we find the next generation of PCB designers and design engineers? Once we locate them, how will we train and educate them? What will PCB designers of the future need to master to deal with tomorrow’s technology?
The Designer of the Future
Our expert contributors peer into their crystal balls and offer their thoughts on the designers and design engineers of tomorrow, and what their jobs will look like.
- Articles
- Columns
Search Console
- Links
- Media kit
||| MENU - design007 Magazine
Estimated reading time: 1 minute

The Shaughnessy Report: Bringing Sexy Back to EDA
Amid all of the hullabaloo in this industry, we sometimes forget one absolute truth: We’re all geeks. Admit it. If you’re reading this, there’s no way around it: You are a geek.
Years ago, I hired an associate editor right out of college. Tracy was 22 and about as hip as 22-year-old women generally are.
After putting on my “Trainer Andy” hat, I broke down the world of electronics design for Tracy. Along the way, I mentioned that the chip designers often consider themselves to be higher up in the hierarchy of life than PCB designers. Chip designers even consider their field to be more hip and sexy than PCB design.
You sense it at shows like DesignCon and the Design Automation Conference. The IC designers treat the mere PCB designers like red-headed stepchildren. The chip guys remind me of the Prius drivers on “South Park.” who cut down on smog but wind up raising the levels of “smug” to dangerously high.
Even within the chip design world, there are subdivisions of “smug.” The functional verification engineers breathe rarefied air and walk on petals of lavender, while the back-end folks might as well sit at the kids’ table at Thanksgiving.
We see it in the media, too. When we’re all together at DesignCon or DAC, the journalists covering chip design view PCB design editors as if we’re one step above writers for Highlights for Children. Sometimes they wrinkle their noses as if someone is trying to mask an odor.
“Oh, you cover PCB design? I didn’t know you could get into this show without an MSEE,” they intone wistfully. “Isn’t that just the cutest thing. Well, good for you! I’m sure it’s a great little publication!”
None of them have ever pinched my cheek like a great aunt, but I wouldn’t rule it out.
So, I conveyed all of this valuable information, objective and subjective, to Tracy. What did she do? She rolled her eyes.Read the full column here.Editor's Note: This column originally appeared in the December 2013 issue of The PCB Design Magazine.
More Columns from The Shaughnessy Report
The Shaughnessy Report: Breaking Down the Language BarrierThe Shaughnessy Report: Back to the Future
The Shaughnessy Report: The Designer of Tomorrow
The Shaughnessy Report: A Stack of Advanced Packaging Info
The Shaughnessy Report: A Handy Look at Rules of Thumb
The Shaughnessy Report: Are You Partial to Partial HDI?
The Shaughnessy Report: Silicon to Systems—The Walls Are Coming Down
The Shaughnessy Report: Watch Out for Cost Adders