![]() Contributing Editors: Peggy Aycinena, Geoffrey James, Gary Smith, Ed Sperling Editor-in-Chief: Gabe Moretti | ![]() ![]() | ||
June 8-13, 2008, Anaheim Convention Center, Anaheim, Calif. |
vol.3 / issue 11 May 1, 2008 | ||
IN THIS ISSUE: Ed Sperling, Rethinking Intel with Justin Rattner and Round Table Discussion on Value Shifts |
45th DAC Program Now Available on the website. Register on or before May 19th and receive 20% off Conference Registration or for a FREE Exhibit Pass! Register on-line today!
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Meet Louise Trevillyan of IBM and Justin Rattner from Intel By Gabe Moretti, Editor DAC is only just a bit more than one month away. In this issue you will find two articles that preview the richness of information you will be able to gather at the conference. Ed Sperling's interview of Justin Rattner, Intel's CTO, gives some tantalizing hints as to the contents of the keynote Dr. Rattner will be delivering Tuesday, June 10. Although the topic of the keynote is digital radio, the article provides a glimpse into the direction Intel intends to follow in growing its business. Along with Apple, another leader of the electronics industry has embraced consumers as the major market for corporate growth. Intellectual Property (IP) and its value to electronics design is the topic discussed in this issue of the DACeZine Forum led by Ed Sperling. Since this issue follows by only a couple of weeks the IP Symposium held in San Jose, I am sure you will find substantial material to widen your outlook on the subject. Peggy Aycinena interviewed Louise Trevillyan, this year's recipient of the Marie Pistilli Women in EDA Award. The article not only provides a compelling portrait of Dr. Trevillyan, but also gives insights into IBM, its culture, and its role in EDA. DAC has been for many years a focus for events that take advantage of the large number of EDA professionals and customers that attend it. This year is no different. In addition to the official collocated events, the SystemC Users Group will hold a workshop, the seventh in as many years; ECSI will offer a workshop on High Level Synthesis; and DASC will hold a working meeting as well. In short, there is so much to do and so much to learn, share, and even criticize, that you just cannot afford to miss it. I look forward to seeing you there. ******************************************** The DACeZine also has a Letters to the Editor section to allow for shorter contributions to the contents and directions of the publication. When necessary, answers to the letters will come from the appropriate member of the team (including our readers), since I do not (yet) hold the total knowledge of the industry within me. I encourage all of you to write, either a viewpoint or a letter, and state your opinions on matters that impact our industry, the contents of this publication, or, for that matter, the publication itself. Send your letters to: dacezine@dac.com.
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Justin Rattner, chief technology officer at Intel, and keynote speaker at this year's DAC, By Ed Sperling Q: The subject of your upcoming keynote speech at DAC is digital radio. Are you talking about the kind of radio in your car or the one in your cell phone? Q: What you are suggesting, then, is adding structure to analog design? Q: This harkens back to the old argument by mathematicians that at the root of everything, it is math. But the problem is the application of that math, right? Rattner: We had Ron Fedkiw, associate professor from Stanford, talking to the senior staff here. He does all these special effects for the movies. He did the water effect for The Poseidon Adventure. His Ph.D. is in mathematics, but he works in computational physics. It is the application of mathematics to physical problems. So the question is: which came first, the physics or the math?
Hardware Design needs Design Management as Much as Software Design Does By Dennis Harmon Semiconductor companies designing the world’s most complex technology products recognize that the intellectual property created by their hardware design teams can represent their most valued corporate asset, both in terms of investment and competitive advantage, in the same way that innovative software companies consider their software intellectual property to be the lifeblood of their companies. And yet a large portion of semiconductor companies have neglected to institute design management systems to protect and secure this critical IC design data, in stark contrast to software organizations, who have understood for literally decades that it is an absolute requirement to set up advanced software configuration management solutions to manage, control and secure their intellectual property before initiating complex software product development.
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By Peggy Aycinena IBM's Louise Trevillyan has been named the 2008 recipient of the Marie R. Pistilli Award. Trevillyan's long years of service and leadership in the industry are also well known—General Chair of ICCAD; Associate Editor of the IEEE Transactions on Computer-Aided Design; member of the technical program committees of both EuroDAC and the International Conference on Computer Design; and member of various review committees for the National Science Foundation, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and the National Academy of Sciences. That Trevillyan is the first woman to have served as Chair of ICCAD, the only woman within her technology area to be elected to the IBM Academy, and among the first group of women permitted to attend graduate school in computer science at the University of Michigan, is testimony to her lifelong courage in breaking down traditional barriers within the technology sector. It was an honor to talk at length recently with Louise Trevillyan. Like so many outstanding technologists, the overall impression Trevillyan leaves is one of dignity, personal warmth, intelligence, humility, and a sense of humor. "It was basically propinquity that led me to logic synthesis," she told me. "I started at the University of Michigan, as did my husband. After we finished there, his DARPA grant moved us to the University of California, but I needed a real job and decided to join IBM. I liked what they were doing and also thought it would give me lots of flexibility. We knew we would not be at Berkeley forever, and IBM was everywhere. "I worked out of an IBM branch office on Market Street in San Francisco selling mainframes. My husband's research was in speech recognition, but when DARPA got out of that work he accepted an offer at IBM's T.J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, so I came to work here as well and never left." ******************************************** DACeZine Forum Value Shifts Intellectual property developers say the real value is now in the integration of IP blocks; IP theft becomes more difficult. DACeZine sat down to discuss the state of intellectual property with Simon Segars, Executive vice president and general manager of ARM’s Physical IP Division; Brani Buric, vice president of Virage Logic’s product marketing and strategic foundry relationships; Brian Gardner, vice president of IP products at Denali Software, and John Koeter, senior director of marketing for Synopsys’ Solutions Group. What follows are excerpts of that discussion. By Ed Sperling Q: In the IP world, there has been talk of massive consolidation as well as conflicting views that there will be lots of small companies that will dominate the industry. What’s really happening?
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