DocumentCode
659055
Title
Why the design productivity gap never happened
Author
Foster, Harry D.
fYear
2013
fDate
18-21 Nov. 2013
Firstpage
581
Lastpage
584
Abstract
In 1997, SEMATECH set off an alarm in the industry when it warned that productivity gains related to IC manufacturing capabilities (which increased at about 40% per year) outpaced the productivity gains in IC design capabilities (which increased at about 20% per year). In spite of this alarming gap between growing silicon capacity and design capabilities, the industry never felt the effects. Why? This invited talk reviews the findings from the 2012 Wilson Research Group Functional Verification Study and identifies the trends that prevented the design productivity gap. However, a more ominous challenge than the design productivity gap is emerging. While silicon capacity grows at a Moore´s Law rate, verification effort grows at a double exponential rate, and the solutions used to close the design productivity gap will not be sufficient to close the verification productivity gap. This invited talk concludes with a discussion on the changes needed to overcome the verification productivity gap.
Keywords
design engineering; integrated circuit manufacture; 2012 Wilson Research Group Functional Verification Study; IC design; IC manufacturing; Moore´s Law; functional verification; productivity gains; productivity gap; Application specific integrated circuits; Graphics; IP networks; Industries; Market research; Productivity; functional verification;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer-Aided Design (ICCAD), 2013 IEEE/ACM International Conference on
Conference_Location
San Jose, CA
ISSN
1092-3152
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICCAD.2013.6691175
Filename
6691175
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