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Beyond the Rulebook
What happens when the rule book is no longer useful, or worse, was never written in the first place? In today’s fast-moving electronics landscape, we’re increasingly asked to design and build what has no precedent, no proven path, and no tidy checklist to follow. This is where “Design for Invention” begins.
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From the growing role of AI in design tools to the challenge of managing cumulative tolerances, these articles in this issue examine the technical details, design choices, and manufacturing considerations that determine whether a board works as intended.
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I-Connect007 Magazine previews APEX EXPO 2026, covering everything from the show floor to the technical conference. For PCB designers, we move past the dreaded auto-router and spotlight AI design tools that actually matter.
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Beyond Design: Transmission Line - From Barbed Wire to High-speed Interconnect
Long before Facebook and Twitter, there was a more primitive type of social network. Hailing from the Old West, it allowed distant communities to meet remotely to share music, spread news, and to just gossip. The non-proprietary, ad hoc network was an unwitting model of democracy and free speech. Unfortunately however, it collapsed--overwhelmed by commercial pressure. The long-forgotten social revolution, and extremely basic technology, was built on barbed wire fences.
Barbed wired fences appeared in the United States in the 1860s and their success, in the control of cattle, swept across the North. However, the South, fearing that the product may harm their cattle, was hesitant to buy the fad at first but ultimately succumbed. Ironically, the barbed wired fence is associated with the cowboy, but unfortunately, it also sounded their end.
As with all communications systems, getting connected, particularly in remote areas, is always a challenge. In the early 1900s, the Bell Telephone company was focusing all efforts on connecting urban areas and like the telephone companies of today, had little interest in connecting remote communities, due to the cost of the infrastructure.
However, an enterprising rancher figured that the West was already sprawled with wire--barbed wire--and discovered that if you hooked two Sears or Monkey Ward telephone sets to a barbed wire fence, he could talk between the telephones as easily as between two city telephones connected via an operator's switchboard. A rural telephone system that had no operators, no bills--and no long-distance charges--was born.
But that lack of broader connectivity eventually doomed the ad hoc network. The commercial phone system's ubiquity, and especially their coveted connection to distant cities, eventually dominated. By the 1920s, the barbed wire telephones and the networks they helped spawn had disappeared. Read the full column here.Editor's Note: This column originally appeared in the May 2014 issue of The PCB Design Magazine.
More Columns from Beyond Design
Beyond Design: ReRAM–The Industry's Next Game-ChangerBeyond Design: Demystifying Common‑Mode Radiation
Beyond Design: Managing Linear Workflow Bottlenecks
Beyond Design: Micro-ohm Power Delivery Network for AI-driven GPUs
Beyond Design: The Fundamental Structure of Spectral Integrity
Beyond Design: Slaying Signal Integrity Villains
Beyond Design: Effective Floor Planning Strategies
Beyond Design: Refining Design Constraints