От: fpga journal update [news@fpgajournal.com]
Отправлено: 30 марта 2004 г. 23:31
Кому: Michael Dolinsky
Тема: FPGA Journal Update Vol II No 13


a techfocus media publication :: March 30, 2004 :: volume II, no. 13


FROM THE EDITOR

Greetings from electronicaUSA in San Francisco. Next week, we’ll have a review of the events, announcements, and fun from this new, unified version of the Embedded Systems Conference, Communications Design Conference, Power Electronics, and Emerging Technologies Forum.

This week, our feature article focuses on the rapidly growing use of FPGA and programmable logic devices in automobiles. With the explosion of in-car capabilities meeting the convergence of consumer, communications, and legacy automotive technologies, FPGAs are the ideal solution to many of the industry’s most pressing design problems.

Thanks for reading!

If there's anything we can do to make our publications more useful to you, please let us know at: comments@fpgajournal.com

Kevin Morris – Editor
FPGA and Programmable Logic Journal

LATEST NEWS

Tuesday, March 30, 2004

John Daane, Brian L. Halla and T. J. Rodgers Headline CEO Panel on 'Tectonic Shifts in Electronics Industry' at Electronica USA

TimeSys Delivers Embedded Linux RTOS and TimeStorm Development Tools for the Pentek Model 4294 VME Board

Nu Horizons Electronics Corp. Announces TCP/IPWeb Server Development Kit Designed For High-Speed Internet Connectivity

Xilinx Publishes Digital Consumer Technology Handbook

Xilinx Embedded Development Kit 6.2i Slashes Development Time From Weeks to Days for MicroBlaze & PowerPC Designs

Leopard Logic Introduces First Gladiator CLD Reference Design

Accelerated Technology Offers Complete Nucleus Development Environment for Xilinx Virtex-II Pro FPGAs

The Memec Group Distributes Impulse C to RTL Co-Development Kit for MicroBlaze Based Systems

Monday, March 29, 2004

Actel Achieves Key Milestone With Its Cost-Effective, Flash-Based FPGAs; Company Ships More Than 1 Million Units

Xilinx Chips Enable electronicaUSA/ESC Best of Show Finalist in Sensio's 3D Wireless Home Theater System

Mercury Computer Systems Named Top Digital Signal Processing Supplier

SBS Technologies Teams with Celoxica Ltd. to Broaden Access to FPGA Computing Development

SBS Technologies Teams with Celoxica to Shorten FPGA Computing Development Time

Nallatech Expands System Design Team in USA

Nallatech Introduces New Range of Virtex-II Based High Performance FPGA Computing Platforms; New Boards Deliver the Highest Commercially Available Performance Density

Friday, March 26, 2004

Avnet Electronics Marketing Announces electronicaUSA Schedule of Events

Thursday, March 25, 2004

Calling All FPGA Designers: Insight Memec Develops Spartan-3 FPGA Hands-On Workshop; Workshop Currently Being Held in Selected Cities Across North America

Lead By Design: Insight Memec Hosts Virtex-II Pro UltraController Workshop; Workshop is Free with the Purchase of Specially Priced Virtex-II Pro Development Kits

Xilinx Event Alert for electronicaUSA Conference, Booth #1326

Artisan and Cascade Semiconductor Solutions Collaborate to Validate PCI Express IP Interoperability

Wednesday, March 24, 2004

Aptix and SoftRISC Collaborate On & Announce VoIP Development Platform; Partnership Facilitates Development of Leading Edge Communications Solutions

Actel Expands MIL-STD-1553 Offering With New IP Core for Military, Space and Industrial Markets

Actel Achieves Quality Milestones With ISO 9001:2000 and QML Certifications

Hardi Electronics Introduces A PCI-X Interface for its ASIC Prototyping System at electronicaUSA

Aldec Selected as HDL Design Entry and Verification Solution for China National IC Base


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CURRENT FEATURE ARTICLES

FPGAs Hit the Road
Programmable Logic Drives Automotive Applications
John East
In-depth with Actel's Savvy CEO
Lattice Fights Back
Lattice-Fujitsu Partnership Opens New Doors
FPGAs Power PC Digital TV
Using FPGAs in USB-powered DVB applications
by Michael Sarpa, Quicklogic
A Sleeping Giant Awakes
Synopsys enters FPGA - for real
Raising the Bar
Nallatech elevates FPGA-based system design
Tilting at Tech Market Windmills
The debate over Dataquest numbers
Aftermarket Avalanche
New Products Propel FPGAs into a Broader Base
A Wolf in Sheep's Clothing
Altera introduces MAX II
Top-Down DSP Design Flow to Silicon Implementation
by Dan Ganousis, AccelChip, Inc.
Physics Drives Physical into the Mainstream
New demands on design tools
Accelerating VoIP
A. Tavoularis, M.G. Manousos, D. Economou,
G. Lykakis (National Technical University of Athens)

FPGAs Hit the Road
Programmable Logic Drives Automotive Applications

When I first started driving, I was technically competent for a teenager. I had the use of an old car that I could drive for as long as I could keep it working. Do-it-yourself car repair was just one of the skills required to be mobile in my family. The components I needed to replace or repair were all still available even though the car was in its second decade. The skills and technical background required to diagnose and solve most of the problems that came up were well within the grasp of the average teenager. When the water-pump bearing/seal assembly expired, a quick trip to the parts store and a couple of hours leaning over the fender (mostly spent trying to find the perfect combination of socket wrenches to remove the six seemingly simple bolts) got me back on the road again.

I never counted, but I’m reasonably certain that the IC count in my car was zero. This wasn’t the Stone Age. I owned a PC and a programmable calculator at the time, but sophisticated semiconductors weren’t involved in any part of my automotive experience. Furthermore, I was confident that by the year 2004, I’d be buzzing around in my flying car or jetpack like everyone else, with internal combustion engines nowhere to be found. My teenage vision of the future was flawed. Instead of my car growing wings, my PC grew wheels. Where I was expecting a revolution in power-plant and drive-train technology, the revolution came in information technology instead.

Today, with the term “telematics” being used regularly by five times as many people as would be able to define it, everyone knows that the revolution is afoot. What no one has figured out is exactly where we’ll be when it’s over. The convergence of computing, wireless communications, control systems, signal processing, consumer, and industrial electronics is nowhere more apparent than in the vortex that is being created over the old-school-engineering-collides-with-21 st-century-technology quagmire of modern automotive design.

While much has been made of the fact that automotive development cycles have shrunk by a factor of two over the past decade or so, the resulting time from concept to deployment to end-of-life of an automobile design is still eons in the evolution of electronics standards. The opposing forces of time-to-market reduction, design flexibility, and obsolescence prevention have brought FPGA and programmable logic technologies into the spotlight as one of the most compelling solutions to design headaches.

While the impact of semiconductor technology was first felt in the area of engine and emissions control, recent developments have focused more in the areas of entertainment, safety, security, comfort, communications and information. In the past, automotive electronic design was somewhat of an island, working almost independently of other applications areas. Through the current explosion of globalization and convergence, however, the fortress walls of engineering isolation are coming down, and automotive engineers are faced with compatibility issues in every direction possible, from telecommunications and networking standards to GPS to the ever-shifting sands of entertainment media and formats. At a more detailed level, designers must deal with the copious cabling required to interconnect these complex systems and with the plethora of power-supplies needed for the wild mix of technologies involved. [more]

ANNOUNCEMENTS

ispPAC Power Manager - Lattice delivers the world's first programmable mixed signal PLD! The new ispPAC Power Manager devices sequence and monitor your board's power supplies including supervisory signal generation. Available NOW in automotive temperature range!


Learn a Bunch, Save a Bundle with Insight Memec/Xilinx Workshops

Spartan™-3 Workshop
Learn Spartan-3 FPGAs and ISE design tools. Get the Spartan-3 LC development kit for under $200 (USD).
http://www.insight.na.memec.com/s3_workshop
Or call 800.677.7716

UltraController™ Workshop
Learn Virtex-II Pro™ FPGAs and the UltraController solution. Get the Virtex-II Pro LC development kit for under $200 (USD).
http://www.insight.na.memec.com/uc_workshop
Or call 800.677.7716

*Attend a workshop free when you order either kit from Insight Memec.



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