DocumentCode
68139
Title
The heritage of Mead & Conway: What has remained the same, what has changed, what was missed, and what lies ahead [point of view]
Author
Casale-Rossi, Marco
Volume
102
Issue
2
fYear
2014
fDate
Feb. 2014
Firstpage
114
Lastpage
119
Abstract
I was an undergraduate student when I read Introduction to VLSI Systems (Mead and Conway, 1979) for the first time, in the early 1980s; most likely a copy brought to Italy by Prof. Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli on the occasion of one of his summer visits to the Politecnico di Milano (Milan, Italy); “the book”introduced me to a world full of new ideas, and contributed to changing the voyage of my life, from mathematics and computer programming to electronic design automation (EDA). I reread “the book”during summer 2012 while working on a customer presentation, and I thought that Mead & Conway´s methods still looked incredibly modern. I wondered what had really changed in the last 30 years, if anything; whether there were fundamental misses in Mead & Conway´s methods; and if and how they could help address the grand challenges and the “red bricks”that lay ahead.
Keywords
VLSI; electronic design automation; EDA; Introduction to VLSI Systems; computer programming; electronic design automation; mathematics; Complexity theory; Engineering education; History; Integrated circuit modeling; Very large scale integration;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Proceedings of the IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JPROC.2013.2295871
Filename
6717019
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