Effort behind reusing IP blocks is underestimated
Anne-Francoise Pele, EE Times
(12/06/2007 4:27 PM EST)
GRENOBLE -- When intellectual property (IP) reuse entered the IC design paradigm more than ten years ago, the semiconductor industry expressed high expectations. IP reuse was indeed seen as a way to foster development productivity and output that would eventually offset the design productivity gap. Based on 1,200 benchmarked IC projects from more than 35 companies, Ron Collett, president and CEO of Numetrics Management Systems, Inc. (Cupertino, California), gave his views on how to achieve maximum IP reuse leverage.
"There are good and bad news about the reuse situation," stated Collett at the IP 07 Conference, organized by Design & Reuse SA, this week in Grenoble. Over the past ten years, reuse leverage more than doubled, and more reuse tends to translates into less project effort, shorter cycle times as well as fewer spins and less schedule slip.
Still on the positive side, Collett indicated that the average transistor count per block is growing and the number of blocks per chip is rising.
Moving to bad news, Collett noted that the average team size has doubled between the years 2000 and 2006. Collett also deplored that the semiconductor industry has serious schedule slip problems. About 85 percent of all IC projects miss their original schedule. "This is chaos. The average schedule slip is 44 percent, and high schedule slip means poor schedule predictability," he asserted.
(12/06/2007 4:27 PM EST)
GRENOBLE -- When intellectual property (IP) reuse entered the IC design paradigm more than ten years ago, the semiconductor industry expressed high expectations. IP reuse was indeed seen as a way to foster development productivity and output that would eventually offset the design productivity gap. Based on 1,200 benchmarked IC projects from more than 35 companies, Ron Collett, president and CEO of Numetrics Management Systems, Inc. (Cupertino, California), gave his views on how to achieve maximum IP reuse leverage.
"There are good and bad news about the reuse situation," stated Collett at the IP 07 Conference, organized by Design & Reuse SA, this week in Grenoble. Over the past ten years, reuse leverage more than doubled, and more reuse tends to translates into less project effort, shorter cycle times as well as fewer spins and less schedule slip.
Still on the positive side, Collett indicated that the average transistor count per block is growing and the number of blocks per chip is rising.
Moving to bad news, Collett noted that the average team size has doubled between the years 2000 and 2006. Collett also deplored that the semiconductor industry has serious schedule slip problems. About 85 percent of all IC projects miss their original schedule. "This is chaos. The average schedule slip is 44 percent, and high schedule slip means poor schedule predictability," he asserted.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- Verification IP for C-PHY
- Band-Gap Voltage Reference with dual 2µA Current Source - X-FAB XT018
- 250nA-88μA Current Reference - X-FAB XT018-0.18μm BCD-on-SOI CMOS
- UCIe D2D Adapter & PHY Integrated IP
- Low Dropout (LDO) Regulator
Related News
- Digital Blocks DB9000 Display Controller IP Core Family Extends Leadership in 8K, Automotive, Medical, Aerospace, and Industrial SoC Designs
- Atmel Introduces New Embedded Memory Blocks to Support High Density FPGA Conversions
- SynTest introduces DFT software that automatically stitches test-ready design blocks and cores together to improve the quality of IC and SoC designs
- Zetex creates blocks for power-management circuits
Latest News
- JEDEC Advances DDR5 MRDIMM Ecosystem with New Memory Interface Logic and Expanded MRDIMM Roadmap
- Altera Brings Determinism to Physical AI Systems with Latest Release of FPGA AI Suite
- Mosaic SoC raises $3.8M to bring real-time spatial intelligence to every consumer device
- UMC Reports First Quarter 2026 Results
- Rambus Appoints Sumeet Gagneja as Chief Financial Officer