VANCOUVER, BC -- (MARKET WIRE) -- Sep 26, 2005 --
Productivity Design Tools (PDTi), a new EDA
company, today announced that it is developing electronic system level
(ESL) software that manages specifications, enabling system-on-a-chip (SoC)
developers to automate all aspects of code and documentation generation.
PDTi provides chip developers with an extensible tool-based methodology
that enables project-wide synchronization, automated re-engineering, and
improved opportunities for reuse. The privately funded Company is focused
on achieving efficiency improvements in chip development through better
abstraction and reuse.
PDTi's first product, SpectaReg, is a soft-IP Generator for memory-mapped
registers. SpectaReg automates code and documentation generation for
registers, which chip developers commonly use for interfacing hardware and
software. Register-maps are an aspect of IP design that is very tedious to
develop, yet fundamental in creating more configurable chips that are
applicable to a wider-range of applications. SpectaReg is built on PDTi's
SpectaGen Framework -- a powerful methodology and tool infrastructure
for building generic and reusable families of IP components. More details
regarding the product, which is aimed at the new Target Compiler market
category, will be released at a later date.
In a recent EETimes article (August 8, 2005) discussing Denali's Blueprint
product that targets a similar design task, Gary Smith, chief EDA analyst
at Gartner Dataquest, indicated that such compilers are a "natural fit" to
complement IP blocks. In the article Smith also notes that, "Too many EDA
companies are standing still right now." Dataquest's Daya Nadamuni echoes
Smith's endorsement of ESL tools. When asked in a June 13, 2005 EETimes
article about what will drive EDA growth, Nadamuni stated that, "It really
seems like ESL is going to be the savior."
"Using tools based on our SpectaGen Framework, hardware, software,
verification, validation and documentation teams can automate their work
from a common 'golden' specification," said Jeremy Ralph, president and
chief executive officer at Productivity Design Tools. "We are excited to
introduce our new product to the market. PDTi is currently seeking beta
customers to help with further development of our memory-mapped register
tool."
Through PDTi's ongoing interaction with chip-development experts and
prospective customers, the Company has established that there is a strong
need for the types of tools it is developing. In many cases, chip
developers have put together ad-hoc in-house solutions to address immediate
needs. PDTi anticipates increasing need for such tools as electronics
systems continue to become more complex and times-to-market continue to
shrink for SoCs.
PDTi acknowledges that there are some companies working on competing
products, but believes its biggest competition comes from prospective
customers who have in-house generator tools. Almost all the EDA companies
in this marketspace are competing simultaneously in adjacent markets, which
consume substantial portions of their resources. Meanwhile, developers of
in-house tools often allocate an unreasonably small budget for tool
development, resulting in shaky solutions that don't scale well across
projects. The support and maintenance of these in-house tools is often
overlooked and under-resourced. PDTi believes it is demonstrably cheaper
and less risky for companies to buy tools and focus on doing what they do
best -- design chips.
PDTi's inaugural product utilizes the industry-standard Structure for
Packaging Integrating and Reusing Intellectual Property within Tool-flows
(SPIRIT), which is being developed by the SPIRIT Consortium to raise the
level of automation and to cut costs in developing SoCs from modular IP
blocks. As a reviewing member of the SPIRIT Consortium, PDTi looks forward
to deploying tools to enable customer benefit from adoption of the
standard.
"The SPIRIT standard is being developed as an enabler for an ecosystem
addressing the wide field of SoC development from high-level abstraction
through RTL, verification and design tool flow," said Ralph von Vignau,
Chair of the SPIRIT Consortium. "Such concepts as reuse, interoperability
and ease of integration open many opportunities for innovative concepts.
The SPIRIT Consortium welcomes the SpectaReg tool being developed by
Productivity Design Tools, based on the SPIRIT 1.1 standard, as another
important component in the growing SPIRIT ecosystem."
PDTi is providing a solution that is flexible enough for any environment,
enabling engineers to extend tool-offerings based on their specific
knowledge and design experience. This simplifies integration with or
replacement of in-house solutions. PDTi's SpectaGen Framework enables
engineers to extend the scope of captured IP specifications,
object-oriented modeling, and the look and feel of generated code and
documentation using a Python-based programming interface. Python is an
open and well established Very High Level Language (VHLL) that is naturally
suited for high-level tasks such as IP modeling and code and documentation
generation (www.python.org).
About Productivity Design Tools SpectaGen Framework
The SpectaGen Framework is a powerful methodology and tool
infrastructure for building generic and reusable families of IP components.
The framework enables the creation of extensible domain-specific IP
generators that capture specifications in a machine-readable format,
enabling engineers to automate the tedious and repetitive process of
manually converting specifications into code and documentation. SpectaGen
applies proven XML and object-oriented techniques to the front-end of chip
development, bridging the gap between specifications and implementation.
This maintains synchronization between changing specifications and
dependent code and documentation, reducing re-engineering efforts and
improving opportunities for reusing IP.
About Productivity Design Tools
Productivity Design Tools is an EDA company providing the most flexible
system-level tools for managing IP specifications, and automating code and
documentation generation for all aspects of chip development. The company
was founded by Jeremy Ralph, a former ASIC and firmware engineer.
Utilizing its SpectaGen Framework, Productivity Design Tools builds
extensible Soft-IP Generators that output hardware, software, verification
and validation code, and documentation in industry-standard formats. By
bridging the gap between 'golden' specifications, and dependent code and
documentation views, Productivity Design Tools enables project-wide
synchronization, reducing tedious work, automating re-engineering, and
improving opportunities for IP reuse. Productivity Design Tools' corporate
headquarters are located in Vancouver, BC, Canada. For more information,
visit Productivity Design Tools at www.productive-eda.com, call
(604) 739-8534, or email Email Contact.
Productivity Design Tools, PDTi, Productive-EDA, the Productivity Design
Tools logo, SpectaGen, SpectaGen Framework, and SpectaReg are trademarks of
Productivity Design Tools Incorporated. All other brands and trademarks
are the property of their respective holders and should be treated as such.
Media Contact:
Jeremy Ralph
President
Productivity Design Tools Inc.
Tel: (604) 739-8534
Email Contact