DocumentCode
465282
Title
Early Power-Aware Design & Validation: Myth or Reality?
Author
Kamhi, Gila ; Miller, Sarah ; Mentor, Stephen Bailey ; Nebel, Wolfgang H. ; Wong, YC ; Karmann, Juergen ; Macii, Enrico ; Kosonocky, Stephen ; Curtis, Steve
Author_Institution
Intel, Haifa, Israel. +972 (4) 865 5412, gila@intel.com
fYear
2007
fDate
4-8 June 2007
Firstpage
210
Lastpage
211
Abstract
Design for low power is crucial for developing and optimizing complex SoCs. Typically, power issues are tackled at the gate-level and backend stages, disconnected from micro-architectural power features or RTL. However, there is growing debate about which stage of the design process is best for dealing with power issues. Leaders associated with the EDA industry and R&D realm will debate whether early power-aware design and validation is viable, and will hold a spirited discussion to determine at which stage of the design process power issues should be tackled: gate level and below, or system level. They will cover various issues involved in automating or establishing a well understood flow/process that delivers quality results, and also will consider organizational hurdles. Attendees will leave this session armed with key questions and valuable insights, and will be challenged to consider if they should change their approach to low-power design.
Keywords
Batteries; Consumer electronics; Costs; Design engineering; Design optimization; Energy consumption; Power engineering and energy; Process design; Quality management; Risk management; Architectural level; Design; Low Power; Measurement; Performance; Power analysis; Power estimation; Power-aware; RTL; System Level; Verification;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Design Automation Conference, 2007. DAC '07. 44th ACM/IEEE
Conference_Location
San Diego, CA
ISSN
0738-100X
Print_ISBN
978-1-59593-627-1
Type
conf
Filename
4261173
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