FROM THE EDITOR This week, new silicon is flying out of the chute as
fast as we can cover it. First, Actel announced their newest
flash-based FPGA family, ProASIC3 which is aimed at the emerging
value-based low-cost/high-volume FPGA market. We take a closer look
in our "Flash
News Flash" feature.
Next up, both LSI Logic and Altera
announced new structured ASIC lines this week. If you weren't yet
convinced that structured ASIC would take off as a new technology,
these announcements may change your mind. We look at both
announcements as well as the battle lines in the structured ASIC
arena in our "Structured
ASIC Starting Line" feature.
Finally, with FPGA prices in
the value-based segment dropping into the single-digit range, it is
no longer sufficient to look just at the cost of the FPGA itself.
Configuration and support circuitry, board area, and power supply
considerations all have a significant impact on total cost for
FPGA-based systems. Actel's Martin Mason tells us more in "Considering
the Total Cost of FPGAs".
Thanks for reading! If there's
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please let us know at: comments@fpgajournal.com
Kevin
Morris – Editor FPGA and Programmable Logic
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Flash News Flash
Actel Unveils ProASIC3
Could this be the iPod of FPGA families? Has Actel created the
happy little "chip that could" to take on the SRAM-dominated titans of the
low-cost FPGA battlefield? Will ProASIC3 Development boards be proudly
displayed on the desks of any development team that wants the nice, clean
look and feel of a secure, single-chip, ready-at-power-up, low-power,
no-hassle solution to their high-volume, middle-of-the-technological-road
design problem?
Like other programmable logic vendors, Actel has noticed
that cell-based ASICs are becoming an increasingly specialized solution
for high-volume electronics products. Only the best-funded, most
risk-immune, highest-volume-and-performance applications can realistically
justify the creation of a cell-based ASIC solution for a new product
development effort. There is a growing mainstream of systems companies
that are turning to FPGA and structured-ASIC solutions, even at very high
production volumes. The enormity of this opportunity has brought Xilinx,
Altera, Lattice, and now Actel into fierce competition for this emerging
market. [more]
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Structured ASIC Starting
Line Vendors Announce New
Families
If the value of structured ASIC as a gap-filler between
programmable logic and cell-based ASIC is still in question, there are at
least two companies on opposite sides of that gap where a decision has
clearly been made. Both LSI Logic and Altera unveiled new families this
week aimed at attacking this new and potentially lucrative segment of the
silicon landscape. Interestingly, both companies' involvement in
structured ASIC can be viewed as a defensive move. As a leading supplier
of cell-based ASICs, LSI shored up its defenses against attack from the
other side of the FPGA/ASIC border a couple of years ago by creating its
RapidChip structured ASIC family. The low-risk, low-NRE, high-performance
solution provided a welcome alternative for design teams that were
possibly about to fall off of LSI's radar due to skyrocketing NREs for
cell-based ASICs.
On the Altera side, structured ASIC poses a
threat to the high end of the FPGA price/performance curve with a more
potent product that mitigates the ASIC NRE penalty. With their
introduction of HardCopy structured ASICs, they employed the "join them"
strategy by offering up their own structured ASIC solution, with the
kicker of a smooth migration from FPGA-based prototyping and early
production, straight into structured ASIC cost-reduction. [more]
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Considering the Total Cost of FPGAs
by Martin Mason, Actel
Corporation
Field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) have a
well-established position in every systems engineer's toolbox. Taking
advantage of their flexibility, engineers have used FPGAs for many years
to rapidly prototype systems or in low-volume pre-production applications.
When the communications- and network-driven Internet bubble took off at
the turn of the millennium, demand skyrocketed for FPGAs in higher gate
densities at any cost. Since then, however, FPGA requirements have changed
dramatically. Today, as companies increasingly focus on the bottom line,
engineers look for silicon solutions that offer both low unit and low
total system cost. While ASICs have traditionally offered the lowest unit
cost of any silicon solution at high volumes, escalating time-to-market
pressures, exponentially increasing NRE charges and the rising need to
mitigate risk are driving up ASIC unit costs, preventing them from
addressing system designers' needs. [more]
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