David Maliniak
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ED Online ID #18499 |
February 19, 2008
Article Rating:
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EDA Alert Update: Optimism Abound For Emulation Sector In 2008
EDA Alert e-Newsletter |
February 19, 2008
Missed the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona? Check Out Electronic Design's MWC Site.
Electronic Design's Mobile World Congress Design Hotspot is chock full of information coming out of the hottest show in the industry for mobile devices. We'll keep you up to date with the latest product and technology news from the show, and coming soon: video interviews from the show with Editorial Director, Mark David, and Technology Editor, Lou Frenzel. CLICK HERE.
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Optimism Abounds For Emulation Sector In 2008
Lauro Rizzatti, General Manager EVE-USA
Unlike so many of my colleagues within the EDA industry, I'm optimistic about 2008. That's because the emulation market sector is on the rise and I believe we could see double-digit growth in this sector. Yes, I'm defying the paltry 2% growth some EDA executives have forecast for the entire industry.
After over 1400 downloads from all corners of the globe, the Open SystemC Initiative (OSCI) has ended the review period for the draft of its TLM-2 modeling standard for transaction-level modeling. The new draft standard further increases tools interoperability for virtual platforms containing memory-mapped buses and on-chip communication networks.
With the release of its latest Antenna Modeling Design System (AMDS), Agilent's full-wave 3-D electromagnetic (EM) modeling and simulation software contains a scripting feature for performance optimization and automation of complex designs such as patch-array antennas. With it, designers can fine-tune antennas for the best performance within electronic devices, such as cell phones.
Claiming dramatic gains in formal verification productivity, OneSpin Solutions has announced a systematic verification process that defines a structured and integrated sequence of user activities and tool tasks. This sequence predictably transforms the design-under-verification (DUV) and its informal specification into a gap-free formal specification and a provably equivalent DUV.
Which one of your gadgets needs better power efficiency?
Your cell phone
Your laptop
Your MP3 player
Your portable video player
To take the poll, Click Here. Remember to scroll down...
Rev up your interdisciplinary design skills
What happens when a microcontroller turns on a power FET, sending a current pulse to a motor coil that develops a magnetic field that turns the rotor shaft, advancing a timing belt that drives a pair of nip rolls suspended on bearings in a web-processing operation on a form, fill, and seal machine installed on a potato chip line at a Frito Lay plant in central California? And how can you be sure that the encoders, prox sensors, and other feedback devices you plan to use will accurately see and report every relevant motion, machine state, and process condition?
And will the signals get through the networks fast enough, without being corrupted, giving the controllers time to execute their algorithms as intended? It's a lot to think about, and it only scratches the surface of what many engineers grapple with today. If you happen to be one of them, then the place for you — where you can find answers and meet others with similar concerns — is www.Mechatronic-Design.com.
Backed by some of engineering's top information sources including Machine Design, Electronic Design, Motion System Design, and Power Electronics, Mechatronic-Design.com is the interdisciplinary engineer's desktop, toolbox, library, and lifeline in one easily accessible place.
Send us your Ideas for Design and we'll pay you $150 for every Idea for Design that we publish. In addition, the year's top design as selected by our readers will earn an additional $500, with two runners-up each receiving $250. You can submit your Ideas for Design via e-mail to: dbs@penton.com or, mail your material to:
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CMOS Circuit Design, Layout, and Simulation: Second Edition
By R. Jacob Baker ISBN: 978-0-470-22941-5
For those who are up-and-coming hotshot designers, as well as the veterans who've seen a lot of scaling in their time, there's a good deal of meat in this 1000+ page reference. Covering both long- and short-channel CMOS technologies in a two-path approach, the book begins with the basics, including an introduction to Spice simulation. After chapters on the makeup of a CMOS device, it moves into operational aspects as well as CMOS fabrication.