California Micro Devices Elects Kenneth E. Thornbrugh Chief Financial Officer.Business Editors/High-Tech Writers MILPITAS, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan. 23, 2002 California Micro Devices Corp. (Nasdaq:CAMD CAMD Center for Advanced Microstructures and Devices CAMD Clean Air Markets Division (US EPA) CAMD Computer-Assisted Molecular Design CAMD Chemical Agent and Munitions Disposal CAMD Carl Asmis Memorial Dressage Association ) announced today that Kenneth E. Thornbrugh has been elected Vice President, Finance and Administration and Chief Financial Officer. Thornbrugh joined the company last month as Director, Financial Planning Financial planning Evaluating the investing and financing options available to a firm. Planning includes attempting to make optimal decisions, projecting the consequences of these decisions for the firm in the form of a financial plan, and then comparing future performance against and Analysis. According to Robert V. Dickinson, CAMD president and chief executive officer, "I have known Ken since the early nineties. He served in key financial leadership roles at Cirrus Logic during its growth from less than one hundred million dollars in revenue to more than one billion. He is a seasoned financial professional who will make a major contribution to California Micro Devices as we focus on the significant growth opportunities that lie ahead." The company noted that John Trewin, its former Vice President, Finance and Chief Financial Officer, has resigned to pursue other opportunities. About California Micro Devices Corp. California Micro Devices Corp. is a leading supplier of Application Specific Integrated Passive (ASIP ASIP American Society for Investigative Pathology ASIP Application Specific Instruction Set Processor ASIP Aircraft Structural Integrity Program ASIP Arrow System Improvement Program (US DoD) ASIP Airborne Signals Intelligence Payload ) networks and related analog semiconductors. Within the company's broad product line are highly integrated solutions that ensure signal integrity, EMI (ElectroMagnetic Interference) An electrical disturbance in a system due to natural phenomena, low-frequency waves from electromechanical devices or high-frequency waves (RFI) from chips and other electronic devices. Allowable limits are governed by the FCC. (electromagnetic interference See EMI. ) filtering, ESD (1) (Electronic Software Distribution) Distributing new software and upgrades via the network rather than individual installations on each machine. See ESL. (electrostatic discharge) protection and smart power management for a broad spectrum of computing, communications, consumer, medical and lighting applications. Detailed corporate and product information may be accessed at www.calmicro.com. |
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