The New Platform-Based Design


By Ann Steffora Mutschler Driven by the continued explosion in design costs, the term ‘platform-based design’ is evolving. A platform used to be viewed as an actual chip with some configurability on it that a semiconductor company promoted. Their customers would buy that chip in volume, configure it to their requirements, and sell it inside their end devices. The definition has beco... » read more

Experts At The Table: Verification Strategies


By Ed Sperling System-Level Design sat down to discuss verification strategies and changes with Harry Foster, chief verification scientist at Mentor Graphics: Janick Bergeron, verification fellow at Synopsys; Pranav Ashar, CTO at Real Intent; Tom Anderson, vice president of marketing at Breker Verification Systems; and Raik Brinkmann, president and CEO of OneSpin Solutions. What follows are ex... » read more

Is This The Era Of Automatic Formal Checks For Verification?


I was thinking about the above question and recalled something IBM would repeat annually back in the late 1980s about its OS/2 replacement for MS-DOS. “This is the year of OS/2!” they would shout. But the marketplace wasn’t listening. As one buddy of mine liked to say, it was only half of an operating system (O.S./2). In the last nine months, my company, Real Intent, along with our com... » read more

Clock And Reset Ubiquity: A CDC Verification Perspective


Today’s SoC integrates a collection of peripherals, memory, graphics, networking and I/O components that originate from a multitude of sources. It could comprise designs from within the company, from other companies or from third-party IP vendors. These independently developed components come together to enable a rich feature set for the SoC. However, accompanying this abundance of features i... » read more

Verifying Complex Chips


System-Level Design talks about what's changing in SoC verification with Janick Bergeron, verification fellow at Synopsys; Harry Foster, chief verification scientist at Mentor Graphics; Pranav Ashar, chief technology officer at Real Intent; Raik Brinkmann, president and CEO of OneSpin Solutions, and Tom Anderson, vice president of marketing at Breker Verification Systems. [youtube vid=DzDYyf... » read more

Mixing It Up


By Ann Steffora Mutschler To enable the next level of productivity in the verification space, certain tools need to be combined and integrated in a very meaningful way. The concept is far from new. This happened on the RTL to GDS front between synthesis and place and route. The tools work very closely and there is bi-directional collaboration. It also happened in the functional verification... » read more

Cost Per Transistor Gets Fuzzier


By Ed Sperling Cost per transistor always has been a major reason for chipmakers to migrate to the next process node. By shrinking transistors and adding more logic, performance usually gets a boost. Moreover, that usually provides enough engineering wiggle room to add some improvements in energy efficiency. The basic assumption that you can double the number of transistors every 24 months,... » read more

Adventures In Verification


By Ed Sperling Design complexity can be almost bit-mapped with verification complexity. There are so many things that need to be verified in a design these days that full coverage has become almost possible to guarantee. That has created a market for tools to help with the verification process—formal, functional, physical—and different methodologies for using those tools. But how to app... » read more

Taking Stock Of Models


By Ann Steffora Mutschler The world of modeling in SoC design is multi-dimensional to say the least. One dimension contains the model creators and providers, while the other is comprised of the types of models that exist in the marketplace. “What we’re seeing today is that we have basically models coming from either IP providers—the people that are actually producing those cores ... » read more

Executive Outlook


By Ed Sperling The view from the top of companies is a like a high-level of abstraction for viewing the industry. While engineers get caught up in individual projects, or pieces of projects, CEOs and CTOs tend to see things from a much broader perspective. So what do they see as the big issues and developments over the next 12 to 24 months? System-Level Design asked industry leaders that q... » read more

← Older posts Newer posts →