JA > The picture showed a line-operated
JA > "plug," which suggests they've
JA > got galvanic isolation.
G > They're taking PRE-ORDERS on their website..
G > This 65W laptop adapter is to be out in mid 2014.
G > At CES 2014 in Las Vegas Jan 7-10
G > Venetian Level 1 Booth #74113
G > Anybody here going to CES?
G > FINsix is supposedly based in Menlo Park, CA
G > ASIC work is to be at: 27 Drydock Avenue, Boston, MA 02210
G > Venture capital backed.
http://www.finsix.com/products/adapter.html
http://www.finsix.com/company/team.html
G > (Impressive)
Leadership Team
Vanessa Green - Chief Executive Officer
Vanessa is co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of FINsix. Most recently,Vanessa was a business development manager at TECOM Investments (Dubai, UAE) where she led business development and strategy for Enpark, a 1.4M square foot sustainable real estate project and investment vehicle. Vanessa worked with the Monitor Group from 2005 – 2007 and is a board member of Community Water Solutions, a non-profit she co-founded in 2008. In 2011, Vanessawon the Patrick E. McGovern Entrepreneurship Award, and was selected as a Boston Business Journal Innovation All-Stars Rising Star and Forbes 30-under-30 in Energy. Vanessa holds an M.Eng. in Civil and Environmental Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, an MBA from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sloan School of Management and a B.A. in Environmental Science from Dartmouth College.
Anthony Sagneri - Chief Technology Officer
Tony is co-founder and Chief Technology Officer at FINsix. Prior to starting FINsix, Tony completed a Ph.D. with the RLE/LEES laboratory at MIT in VHFpower. He helped establish the fundamental network principles behind VHF power conversion and designed and built over a dozen high-performance converters. In addition he established and validated device optimization and transformer synthesis techniques enabling higher efficiency and access to a broader applications space. Before MIT, Tony served for five years in the U.S.Air Force, rising to the rank of Captain. As a Mission Operations Commander at DGS-2, Beale AFB, he led a team of 70 intelligence operators to 169 collection missions over a number of locations worldwide. Tony holds a Ph.D. and S.M. in Electrical Engineering from MIT, a BSEE from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and is a graduate of the U.S. Air Force Intelligence OfficerCourse.
Joseph Scarci - VP of Sales and Marketing
Joe is Vice President of Sales and Marketing at FINsix, where he leads all product management, product marketing, marcom, and partnering activities. Prior to FINsix, Joe worked as Vice President of Marketing at SolarBridge Technologies, a microinverter start-up based in Austin, TX. At SolarBridge, Joe was responsible for all marketing and sales activities and led partnering efforts that resulted in six contracts with leading solar panel manufacturers. Prior to SolarBridge, he worked at Schneider Electric/American Power Conversion, Analog Devices, and AT&T, where he held a variety of general management and senior marketing positions. Joe earned both a Bachelor of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering and a Master of Business Administration degree from Carnegie Mellon University.
Jim Kardarch - Director, Technology Integration (Computing)
Jim retired from Intel at the end of 2012 as a Senior Principal Engineer and Chief Power Architect. Jim worked at Intel for 26 years, with 24 years focused on notebook platform architecture and low power technologies. Jim hasover 100 issued patents and has lead development of many industry specifications including ACPI (Advanced Configuration and Power Interface), and a low power radio technology he famously named Bluetooth. Jim is a senior member of IEEE, was an original inductee into the Bluetooth Hall of Fame (2006), and was a runner up in the Discover Magazine Award for Technology Innovation in 1999, has received five Intel Achievement Awards and a gold Intel Environmental award. Jim also does volunteer work with the MESA (Math Engineering Science and Achievement) program for underprivileged students to encourage STEM education for which Jim was awarded the 2012 Santa Clara Site Intel Involved Hero Award and works with the MESA program as part of an EncoreFellowship program. Jim has a BS in Electrical Engineering from CaliforniaState University Fresno (’84) and was recently awarded their “Top Dog” Alumni award for lifetime achievement (Go Dogs!) and was recently featured in the CSU Working in California series for CSU’s 50th anniversary.
Dave Grant - Director, IC Development
Dave is the Director of IC development at FINsix. Prior to FINsix, Dave worked at Texas Instruments for 18 years, holding the title of Distinguished Member of Technical Staff. At Texas Instruments he designed and led the design of many different families of analog and mixed signal ICs, including power controllers, monolithic power converters, LDOs and RF ICs. Prior to Texas Instruments, Dave worked as a system level designer for 11 years, developing video test equipment for Philips, CRT based computer monitors and test hardware for IBM, high end stereo electronics for Linn Products and digitalelectronics for a business computer company. He has 20 issued patents. Dave has a BSc in Electrical and Electronic Engineering from The University ofGlasgow, Scotland, UK.
G > Their other product:
http://www.finsix.com/products/led.html
LED Driver (In Development)
G > I just hope it's not another vaporware..
Jan > So it seems to be resonant after all...:
Jan >
http://www.finsix.com/technology/advantages.html
Technology Advantages
10x Power Density
At VHF switching frequencies, energy is processed more often, so it can be handled in smaller chunks. This means less temporary energy storage so the inductors and capacitors can shrink. Since these energy storage components occupy the bulk of the volume, the direct consequence is reduced converter size—up to 10x—and higher power density.
Amazing Transient Response
Transient response reflects how fast a power converter can adapt to changesin the load or source. FINsix converters are 1,000x faster than today’s technology. This makes life easier for system designers and enables unexpected applications, like best in class dimming and compatibility for LED lamps.
Rugged Reliability
The elimination of heavy components, like magnetic core transformers, enables superior resistance to mechanical shock and vibration. Furthermore, the overall reduction in component count, specifically of through-hole components, means fewer points of failure.
Batch Manufacturing
Since we don’t need discrete inductors or other through-hole components, our power converters can be manufactured in a fully automated surface-mountprocess, ensuring high reliability and repeatability.
Jan > And no efficiencey numbers given, must be really bad.
Jan > Only advantage small size?
Jan > Only 110 V?
Jan > How about RF interference at VHF? with DTV, cellphones?
Jan > Normal switchers are already bad enough,
Jan > I have one radiating 250 kHz.
This would be hard to get past FCC emissions testing right?
Jan > And to say, here:
http://www.finsix.com/products/led.html
"Highest Performance - Blinking,
instability, noise and LED lamps
that just refuse to turn on are history."
Jan > Well that is almost like saying:
Jan > "Our cars start every time, unlike noisy
Jan > other ones that just refuse to start..."
Jan > Gimme a break.
Jan >
Do any of your LED lamps "just refuse to turn on" ?
ROFL
What do you think the odds are that
FINsix will make it to 2015?