DocumentCode
1549722
Title
System-on-chip design: impact on education and research
Author
De Man, Hugo
Author_Institution
Katholieke Univ., Leuven, Belgium
Volume
16
Issue
3
fYear
1999
fDate
6/21/1905 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
11
Lastpage
19
Abstract
Deep-submicron technology is rapidly leading to exceedingly complex, billion-transistor chips. Within a decade, these chips will deliver enormous computing power as well as RF and analog interfaces for information and communication technology. At the same time, portability and the need for inexpensive packaging will limit power consumption to a few watts or less. These systems-on-chip (SOCs), designed at the processor-memory level, will fuel the future information society. Such designs depend, however, on SOC architects who can bridge the gap between software-centric system specifications and their implementation in novel, energy-efficient silicon architectures. Designing such hardware-software platforms will require a global-system approach from concept to implementation, which may well require a rethinking of present engineering schools. Chips will no longer be stand-alone components but complete silicon boards encapsulating complex system knowledge. These boards will be specified far above the hardware-description-language level and implemented in new, heterogeneous architectures designed at the processor-memory level. Today we know very little about the nature of these future architectures, let alone the design methodology. We will instead need the design research center concept. The research center´s goal will be to perform cross-disciplinary system design research to create new methodologies, tools, libraries, and courses-distributed via the Internet-to produce enough SOC architects worldwide
Keywords
electronic engineering education; research initiatives; systems engineering; technological forecasting; SOC architects; deep-submicron technology; engineering schools; hardware-software platforms; libraries; methodologies; system design research; tools; Analog computers; Communications technology; Computer interfaces; Energy consumption; Fuels; Packaging; Process design; Radio frequency; Silicon; System-on-a-chip;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Design & Test of Computers, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0740-7475
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/54.785820
Filename
785820
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