Should IP adopt a services business model?
David Bursky, EE Times
(07/25/2006 6:33 PM EDT)
SAN FRANCISCO — The use of intellectual property (IP) has become the de facto approach for implementing almost any system-on-a-chip (SoC), but, according to some panelists at a Monday (July 24) Design Automation Conference session, designers have to rethink the way they approach the use of IP.
Today, most designers think of a block of IP as a product said Naveed Sherwani, the CEO of Open Silicon. However, the IP should really be thought of as a service, he said, since there is often a need for continuing support from the supplier of the IP.
Unlike products that usually come with some type of guarantee regarding their functionality, IP licenses rarely come with a guarantee. Thus, the basic business model needs fixing, said Sherwani.
Anyone who has designed an SoC and has had a problem getting the chip to work due to IP that doesn't function as advertised knows the frustration of going back and forth between the IP vendors and the fabrication facility to determine where the fault lies, explained Sherwani.
(07/25/2006 6:33 PM EDT)
SAN FRANCISCO — The use of intellectual property (IP) has become the de facto approach for implementing almost any system-on-a-chip (SoC), but, according to some panelists at a Monday (July 24) Design Automation Conference session, designers have to rethink the way they approach the use of IP.
Today, most designers think of a block of IP as a product said Naveed Sherwani, the CEO of Open Silicon. However, the IP should really be thought of as a service, he said, since there is often a need for continuing support from the supplier of the IP.
Unlike products that usually come with some type of guarantee regarding their functionality, IP licenses rarely come with a guarantee. Thus, the basic business model needs fixing, said Sherwani.
Anyone who has designed an SoC and has had a problem getting the chip to work due to IP that doesn't function as advertised knows the frustration of going back and forth between the IP vendors and the fabrication facility to determine where the fault lies, explained Sherwani.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- 5G-NTN Modem IP for Satellite User Terminals
- AXI-S Protocol Layer for UCIe
- HBM4E Controller IP
- 14-bit 12.5MSPS SAR ADC - Tower 65nm
- 5G-Advanced Modem IP for Edge and IoT Applications
Related News
- Sequans Expands Business Model with Technology IP Licensing and Engineering Services
- UPMEM selects Semidynamics RISC-V AI IP for Large Language Model Application
- Cadence Completes Acquisition of Arm Artisan Foundation IP Business
- Synopsys Enters Definitive Agreement with GlobalFoundries For Sale of Processor IP Solutions Business
Latest News
- OpenTitan Ships in Chromebooks: First Production Deployment
- Breker Verification Systems Adds RISC‑V Industry Expert Larry Lapides to its Advisory Board
- Weebit Nano’s ReRAM Selected for Korean National Compute-in-Memory Program
- Marvell Extends ZR/ZR+ Leadership with Industry-first 1.6T ZR/ZR+ Pluggable and 2nm Coherent DSPs for Secure AI Scale-across Interconnects
- BrainChip Announces Neuromorphyx as Strategic Customer and Go-to-Market Partner for AKD1500 Neuromorphic Processor