FROM THE EDITOR
This week, we’ve been working on wrapping up our
2004 FPGA market study. In looking over the data, we notice that
(surprise, surprise) there is a massive migration underway toward
low-cost, value-based FPGAs. This doesn’t mean that fewer people are
designing in the high-end devices. Those are actually growing too,
but the number of design starts (and finishes, for that matter) in
the value-based segment is increasing rapidly.
Lattice
Semiconductor raised their bid in that arena this week with their
announcement of LatticeXP, a new non-volatile version of their
groundbreaking EC family. Our first feature article looks at the new
family in detail. If Lattice and Actel are right, non-volatility may
be a key ingredient in the successful value-based FPGA. Only time
and the market will tell us for sure.
Our second new article
this week comes from AMI, and discusses the process of cost-reducing
complex FPGAs by migrating to mask-programmed technology. It’s
looking like the structured ASIC approach (yes, we know they are
really gate-arrays wearing clever disguises) is getting traction in
the market, and has some compelling benefits to offer as a
gap-filler between FPGA and cell-based ASIC.
By the way, in a
bout of blatant commercialism, I've been asked to mention that our
2004 FPGA market study will soon be for sale. For those of you who
want all of the data right away with plenty of charts and graphs,
it's a valuable resource. You could try to get bits of it over the
course of the next year by reading all of our articles, but that
might be like getting a chess set one piece at a time through the
mail. It'd be a long time before you'd have enough pieces to play
with. If you're interested in the survey, drop us an e-mail at info@fpgajournal.com. [end of
commercial] And now back to our regularly scheduled
programming…
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
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CURRENT FEATURE
ARTICLES
Lattice
Launches XP Non-Volatility at the Forefront of
FPGA High-Density
FPGA-to-ASIC Conversions using Structured ASIC: Fills the Gap
by Rick Mosher and Bob Kirk, AMI Semiconductor,
Inc. Breakthrough
Bandwidth SerDes Hits New Heights Making
the Jump to 10G by Abhijit Athavale and Brian
Seemann, Xilinx, Inc. Co-Verification
Methodology for Platform FPGAs by
Milan Saini, Xilinx, Inc. and Ross Nelson, Mentor
Graphics Simulator
Savvy Getting the Most
From Your HDL The
Impact of Timing Exceptions on FPGA Performance by James Henson, FishTail
Design Automation Inc. Prime-time
Processing Are Embedded Systems on FPGA
Ready? FPGA-based
System-on-Module Approach Cuts Time to Market, Avoids
Obsolescence by Chris Wright and Mike Arens,
Ultimodule, Inc. Nick
Martin Unconventional
Widsom from Altium's
Founder
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Lattice Launches XP
Non-Volatility at the Forefront of FPGA
There’s something of a Renaissance going on at Lattice
semiconductor right now. Since forming their partnership with Fujitsu
about a year ago, the company has sustained a steady stream of relevant
announcements of new, competitive product lines. Not content to stay put
in the commodity CPLD business, Lattice is mounting an aggressive campaign
to capture a share of the emerging value-based FPGA market.
This week, Lattice stepped up their attack with the
announcement of their new Lattice-XP line. Continuing the recent “Wolf in
Sheep’s Clothing” trend in flash-based programmable logic, this family is
a hybrid technology, seeking the benefits of non-volatile flash technology
combined with the usual advantages of SRAM-based FPGAs. Lattice
accomplishes this blend by adding on-chip flash RAM, which is capable of
configuring the SRAM-based LUT architecture (the same as in their new EC
and ECP lines). This makes Lattice-XP a single-chip, non-volatile FPGA
with all the benefits and performance of an SRAM-based technology.
While Lattice’s EC and ECP lines seem poised to directly
compete with Xilinx’s Spartan-3 and Altera’s Cyclone II, XP aims more at
Actel’s recently announced ProASIC 3 line. With four aggressive companies
investing heavily in the low-cost, high-volume, value-based FPGA market,
the winner will definitely be the consumer. Lattice’s announcement heats
up the competition and states once again that the rules and conventions of
the previous FPGA market do not apply in this new space. For years, FPGA
companies have competed along the same basic battle lines, derived from
the needs of the telecom and networking industries. Raw performance,
capacity, and reprogrammability were at a premium. Cost, power, and
security were back-seat concerns. [more]
High-Density FPGA-to-ASIC Conversions using
Structured ASIC: Fills the Gap by Rick Mosher and Bob
Kirk, AMI Semiconductor, Inc.
Introduction Managing the
increasing complexity of today's digital applications calls for new design
strategies. Risk, cost and time-to-market (TTM) can make or break a
product development. While many designers are turning to FPGAs to reduce
risk and improve TTM, the staggering per unit cost of high-density FPGAs
quickly becomes intolerable for even low volume applications. Cell-based
ASIC solutions offer much lower per unit cost, but the NREs for deep
sub-micron technologies are becoming cost prohibitive. Structured ASICs
fill the gap by offering excellent per unit cost and reasonable NREs. This
paper describes a design flow starting with FPGA prototyping followed by
conversion to a structured ASIC. The paper then describes how structured
ASICs can be used to support a range of applications and how they can be
used to quickly introduce cost effective, complex, digital products to
market with minimal risk.
1. Comparing The Different Hardware Platforms
When selecting a hardware platform, the designer has many
different options for complex digital designs including field programmable
gate array (FPGA), cell-based application specific integrated circuit
(ASIC), application specific standard product (ASSP) and structured ASIC
technology. [more]
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