Title :
Trends toward spatial computing architectures
Author_Institution :
California Univ., Berkeley, CA, USA
Abstract :
Describes the peak computation offered per unit silicon for RISC processors and FPGAs over the past two decades. Advances in processor architecture allow turning additional silicon area into additional performance. The time unit (seconds) is absolute, not normalized to process, so this represents some actual sacrifice of the increasing capabilities provided by the fabrication process to the design process, more complicated architectures, and increasing memory imbalance. The peak computational density for FPGAs shows at least a 10/spl times/ gap in raw density between processor architectures and FPGAs. The author assesses what this shows and what it means for the design of postfabrication, programmable computing devices.
Keywords :
field programmable gate arrays; integrated circuit design; reduced instruction set computing; FPGAs; RISC processors; computational density; design process; memory imbalance; peak computation; processor architecture; programmable computing devices; spatial computing architectures; Computer aided instruction; Computer architecture; Fabrication; Field programmable gate arrays; Memory architecture; Process design; Reduced instruction set computing; Silicon; Throughput; Turning;
Conference_Titel :
Solid-State Circuits Conference, 1999. Digest of Technical Papers. ISSCC. 1999 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5126-6
DOI :
10.1109/ISSCC.1999.759296