The Relevance of System Design
By Gabe Moretti
April 30, 2008 - edadesignline.com
A piece by Patrick Mannion (Opinion: The irrelevance of silicon, written just after the Embedded Systems Conference puts forward the thesis that software constitutes the added value in today's products and will become more important than hardware in future products. Nick Tredennick, technology analyst for Gilder Publishing, the main keynote speaker at the conference, went as far as stating that transistors are "good enough". Mr. Tredennick is obviously unaware of the many physics issues semiconductors designers are struggling with.
It is true that I myself have pointed out that there are applications that are well served with semiconductor technologies that are no longer leading edge. It is true that there is still a place for 8051 architectures built with 180 nm processes. But is also true that we have yet to reach true real time response for many applications, and that markets that require fast correlation of diverse data types are mostly still under served due to limitation in the hardware.
Only looking at either soft or hard components of a products is taking the wrong approach. It is the system that counts, and a leading product is the result of the correct tradeoff between hard and soft components to meet well thought requirements.
April 30, 2008 - edadesignline.com
A piece by Patrick Mannion (Opinion: The irrelevance of silicon, written just after the Embedded Systems Conference puts forward the thesis that software constitutes the added value in today's products and will become more important than hardware in future products. Nick Tredennick, technology analyst for Gilder Publishing, the main keynote speaker at the conference, went as far as stating that transistors are "good enough". Mr. Tredennick is obviously unaware of the many physics issues semiconductors designers are struggling with.
It is true that I myself have pointed out that there are applications that are well served with semiconductor technologies that are no longer leading edge. It is true that there is still a place for 8051 architectures built with 180 nm processes. But is also true that we have yet to reach true real time response for many applications, and that markets that require fast correlation of diverse data types are mostly still under served due to limitation in the hardware.
Only looking at either soft or hard components of a products is taking the wrong approach. It is the system that counts, and a leading product is the result of the correct tradeoff between hard and soft components to meet well thought requirements.
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 Articles
- Emerging Trends and Challenges in Embedded System Design
- SpiritEd: A Register Specification System integrating IP-XACT and Adobe FrameMaker
- Accurate System Level Power Estimation through Fast Gate-Level Power Characterization
- FPGA based Complex System Designs: Methodology and Techniques
Latest Articles
- SCENIC: Stream Computation-Enhanced SmartNIC
- Agentic AI-based Coverage Closure for Formal Verification
- Microarchitectural Co-Optimization for Sustained Throughput of RISC-V Multi-Lane Chaining Vector Processors
- RISC-V Functional Safety for Autonomous Automotive Systems: An Analytical Framework and Research Roadmap for ML-Assisted Certification
- Emulation-based System-on-Chip Security Verification: Challenges and Opportunities