DocumentCode :
3039304
Title :
Flexibility and Low Power; A Contradiction in Terms; Can Configurable or Re-Configurable Computing Offer Solutions?
Author :
Wintermayr, P. ; Hartenstein, R. ; Meyr, Heinrich ; Leibson, S.
Author_Institution :
Markt und Technik, Munich
fYear :
2006
fDate :
4-6 Oct. 2006
Firstpage :
375
Lastpage :
375
Abstract :
Both configurable computing paradigms as well as re-configurable computing paradigms have gained significant impact within the last few years. Both paradigms have shown to be effective when power consumption is a major design constraint even though the philosophies behind are quite different: configurable approaches aim to adapt an embedded processor to an application through, for example, an extensible instruction set plus other parameters that are determined during design time. They come in two basic flavors: starting with a fixed core that is extended by the system designer or; designing the instruction set from scratch for a specific application. Re-configurable approaches on the other side gain most of their benefits through run-time re-configuration. A high degree of parallelism is needed to overcome the physical deficiencies of re-configurable fabrics (e.g. FPGAs), though. The panel will discuss advantages and disadvantages of these paradigms with respect to low power
Keywords :
embedded systems; field programmable gate arrays; integrated circuit design; low-power electronics; power consumption; FPGA; configurable computing; embedded processor; flexibility; low power design; parallelism degree; power consumption; re-configurable computing; run-time re-configuration; system design; Energy consumption; Fabrics; Field programmable gate arrays; Parallel processing; Runtime;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Low Power Electronics and Design, 2006. ISLPED'06. Proceedings of the 2006 International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Tegernsee
Print_ISBN :
1-59593-462-6
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/LPE.2006.4271871
Filename :
4271871
Link To Document :
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