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| Content Provider | IET Digital Library |
|---|---|
| Author | Edwards, Christopher |
| Abstract | Twenty years ago electronics design faced a looming problem. The number of transistors that could be laid out on each chip was spiralling up towards the tens of millions. But hardware design lagged behind - engineers were not turning out circuits quickly enough. Extrapolating the numbers to the mid-2010s it looked as though the world's hardware designers could team up and maybe just about accumulate enough person-months to produce a single billion transistor chip design. Yet the design gap vanished almost as quickly as it appeared. In much the same way that designers at the board level moved from wiring logic functions together to using high-integration chips, the chip designers themselves started to buy in intellectual property (IF) offered by specialist companies such as ARM. Having passed the billion-transistor mark, the 1P-centric model has itself become a source of problems when it comes to checking that the final design works. The scale of the problem challenges traditional verification methods that were designed for smaller projects. |
| Starting Page | 40 |
| Ending Page | 43 |
| Page Count | 4 |
| ISSN | 17509637 |
| Volume Number | 11 |
| e-ISSN | 17509645 |
| Issue Number | Issue 4, May (2016) |
| Alternate Webpage(s) | https://digital-library.theiet.org/content/journals/et/11/4 |
| Journal | Engineering & Technology |
| Access Restriction | Limited |
| Subject Keyword | 1P-centric Model ARM Electronics Design Hardware Design High-integration Chips Integrated Circuit Design Intellectual Property Layout Microprocessor Chips Microprocessors And Microcomputer Modelling And Testing Semiconductor Integrated Circuit Design Transistor Chip Design Transistor Circuit Wiring Logic Function |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |
| Subject | Electrical and Electronic Engineering |
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