Agilent technologies (6) | ![]() |
Electronics company (8) | ![]() |
General electric (21) | ![]() |
Qualcomm (47) | ![]() |
Raytheon (16) | ![]() |
Samsung (186) | ![]() |
Siemens (17) | ![]() |
Sony (81) | ![]() |
Xerox (8) | ![]() |
#These companies include Siemens Industry Software. With design centres around India, they make software used for everything from designing car parts to building vehicles sent into space.
Behind them are huge posters of the Curiosity rover on Mars. Nasa's Jet propulsion laboratory used a portfolio of design software made by Siemens to digitally design,
says Suman Bose, Managing director of Siemens Industry Software. While the company has extensive R&d labs across the country,
who is working with one of the big industrial MRI players the health-care arm of Siemens,
and industry including Siemens Fraunhofer Universal Robots Philips and the Technische Universitã¤t Mà nchen (TUM).
nor even the first to use external magnetic propulsion the Olympus/Siemens ingestible device being one notable example the TE is,
Microsoft, andcisco and Associate Partner Siemens have been working with Chinese companies on national information security as well as technologies
and we'll cool planet Siemens: 880m euros'worth of wind power orders since July Google invests $75 million in U s. wind far r
a professor of chemistry and materials science and engineering at the University of Illinois. Semprius has raised $45 million from investors including Siemens,
Valley of Darkness Siemens acquired its stake in Semprius in June 2011. After a detailed examination of its technology, says Thomas Mart, the global head of solar activities at Siemens,
hat we saw is a way to get to very low costs of electricity. The plan had been for Siemens
and Semprius to work together, with Semprius producing its concentrated photovoltaic devices and Siemens drawing on its expertise in building solar power plants.
But 15 months after Siemens invested in Semprius, everything fell apart. Huge investments in conventional silicon solar power, especially in China
had lowered costs of production but also flooded the market with cheap solar panels. Given the supply of cheap solar panels,
convincing Siemens to get out of the business, ending the partnership and marking the beginning of hard times for Semprius.
Having the backing of Siemens would have helped convince utilities to take a chance on novel technology. Without such a partner
Earlier this year Siemens broke ground in Mainz Germany on what it says will be the world s largest proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolyzer.
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