The problem with the definition of ESL
How long have we heard the promises associated with a move to the Electronic System Level (ESL)? For the longest time it seemed as if all of the predictions about its growth kept moving out another year - every year. It always appeared to be just on the cusp of exploding, but never quite happened. And then all of a sudden, without any kind of fanfare it was here. People are talking about how they use it, their successes, they are complaining about aspects of it as if this was technology they had been using for years. They have wish lists, and openly talk about the limitations. Perhaps the most interesting part is that many of them don’t even call it ESL - It is just getting the job done. How can this be?
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- Ultra-Low-Power LPDDR3/LPDDR2/DDR3L Combo Subsystem
- Parameterizable compact BCH codec
- 1G BASE-T Ethernet Verification IP
- Network-on-Chip (NoC)
- Microsecond Channel (MSC/MSC-Plus) Controller
Related Blogs
- 8K Ultra HD: A Giant Leap for High Definition Televisions
- Embarrassingly Parallel Problems: Definitions, Challenges and Solutions
- Critical Safety Overview and Definitions
Latest Blogs
- Physical AI at the Edge: A New Chapter in Device Intelligence
- Rivian’s autonomy breakthrough built with Arm: the compute foundation for the rise of physical AI
- AV1 Image File Format Specification Gets an Upgrade with AVIF v1.2.0
- Industry’s First End-to-End eUSB2V2 Demo for Edge AI and AI PCs at CES
- Integrating Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC) on Arty-Z7