Rumble Time: Y-1 (Symetrix) vs. PZT (Ramtron/Racom)
  This is the battle that matters.......
   October 20, 1997                 Volume 35, Number 1,796 Issued: Wed. October 22, 1997                 2:00 p.m. JST                 -------------------------------------------------------
                     * Two Giants Join Hands On Smart Cards                    * Internet Erasing Some Old Business Forms                    * Digital Dream Kids Take High-Tech Route To School
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                   Two Giants Join Hands On Smart Cards
                   BY ATSUHIRO YAMAZAKI and YURI MOMOI                  Staff writers
                   Matsushita Electronics Corp. and major U.S.                  semiconductor manufacturer Motorola Inc. will                  cooperate on next-generation smart-card technologies.
                   Matsushita Electric Industrial   [smart card photo]                  Co., the parent of Matsushita                  Electronics, said last week     Matsushita hopes to                  that the subsidiary and         establish a de facto                  Motorola will develop           standard for                  semiconductors for              next-generation smart                  high-performance                cards, as well as the                  noncontact-type smart cards.    memory technology to                  And starting in 1999, both are  be used in them.                  to begin global marketing of both the chips and the                  cards.
                   Through this arrangement, Matsushita aims to kill two                  birds with one stone, establishing a de facto                  standard not only for next-generation smart cards,                  but for ferroelectric random-access memory (FeRAM),                  the technology to be used in the cards.
                   There are three main points to the agreement:
                      * Matsushita will license its production                       technology for the memory to Motorola.
                      * The two companies will jointly develop chips                       combining Matsushita's FeRAM with Motorola's                       microprocessors for use in noncontact-type smart                       cards.
                      * Both companies will have marketing rights to the                       chips and the cards.
                   With the agreement, Matsushita Electronics will enter                  the FeRAM business in earnest, expecting it plus                  microprocessors to grow into a 100 billion yen ($826                  million) business in 2005. Matsushita Electric, for                  its part, will work to develop electronic-money                  systems, intelligent traffic systems, and a variety                  of other products related to smart cards that comply                  with the standards of the newly developed chips and                  cards.
                   Warring camps
                   But there is more to this agreement than a simple                  joining of hands of two companies. The backdrop is a                  larger war between two camps, each trying to promote                  its own version of FeRAM.
                   FeRAM is a type of nonvolatile memory. That means                  that, unlike with dynamic random-access memory, the                  data remains in the chip even after the power is cut.                  The present generation of contact-type smart cards                  also employs a type of nonvolatile memory, but FeRAM                  can process data 20 times faster and hold 10 times                  more information.
                   There are two basic FeRAM technologies, one developed                  by Symetrix Corp. and based on Y-1 ferroelectric                  materials, and the other developed by Ramtron                  International Corp. and based on lead zirconate                  titanate (PZT) materials.
                   These two U.S. companies have each rallied a group of                  the world's leading semiconductor manufacturers                  around their respective FeRAM banners, and companies                  in each camp have licensed the FeRAM technology and                  are fervently working to develop commercial                  technologies.
                   Matsushita Electronics has developed FeRAM-based                  chips and smart cards and will begin marketing them                  in December for use in such applications as building                  security systems. "We're the first to put a Y-1                  product on the world stage," boasted Gota Kano, head                  of its technology division.
                   Actually, the first company in either camp to                  commercialize a FeRAM product was Rohm Co., which                  licensed Ramtron's PZT technology and began making                  FeRAM chips at a rate of 10,000 per month at the                  start of the fiscal year in April.
                   However, Kano deserves to boast a bit, because the                  Y-1 technology is more advanced and more difficult to                  work with than PZT-based FeRAM.
                   Set to expand
                   And now, with the tie-up with Motorola, a leader in                  smart cards, the company's FeRAM business is set to                  expand. "Matsushita Electronics' integrated-circuit                  card memory is truly superior," said Shigeru Togano,                  operations manager at Nippon Motorola Ltd.
                   In August, Motorola signed a technology agreement                  with Sony Corp. concerning chips for a hybrid type of                  contact/noncontact smart card for the growing                  European market. But "that's only a partial                  agreement; the deal with Matsushita, which has its                  eye on next-generation high-performance chips, is of                  much broader scope," said Togano.
                   How did this deal come about? It certainly seems out                  of character for Matsushita Electric, which has a                  tradition of going it alone and is sometimes                  ridiculed for its cautious tendency to follow the                  lead of others and come out second with products.
                   The answer is that Matsushita Electronics has                  abandoned both traditions under the aggressive                  leadership of Kazu-hiro Mori, who took over the                  presidency in June 1996.
                   Under Mori, Matsushita Electronics has launched a                  series of new projects, including investing in new                  lines of liquid crystal displays and deciding to                  build a rationally planned low-cost factory for                  next-generation semiconductors. |