FROM THE EDITOR
This week, contributing editor Amy Malagamba is
back with an in-depth look at the implications and applications of
the current generation of high-density flagship FPGAs. With the
recent move to 90nm, increased density, more hard-IP features, and
lower unit cost could drive these device families into new and
different applications, but are they?
Next up we have a contributed article from Suhel Dhanani at Xilinx on the new capabilities
that today’s super-low-cost FPGAs offer to the consumer market. In
the past, CPLDs were the only programmable logic devices with
significant consumer market penetration. Now, full-featured FPGAs
offer an attractive new alternative to designers of consumer
electronics who want more flexibility, faster time-to-market, and
greater product longevity.
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
June 14, 2005
Atrenta
and Doulos Partner to Help Electronic Developers Accelerate SystemC
Deployment; Predictive Analysis from Atrenta, Training by Doulos
Provide Integrated, Best-in-Class Solutions for Faster, Easier
SystemC Adoption
National
Instruments Introduces New Intelligent Data Acquisition Devices; New
Reconfigurable Devices Powered by LabVIEW FPGA Technology Feature
Onboard Processing
Nallatech
Revenues Up 80% Worldwide, 120% in North America; Drives Growth by
Expanding Acceptance of FPGA-Base Computing
Altera's
HardCopy II Structured ASICs and MAX II CPLDs Named Ultimate
Products by eeProductCenter
Customer
Bulletin: Xilinx Demonstrates 7x Signal Integrity Advantage of
Virtex-4 FPGAs to Engineers Around the World
June 13, 2005
Poseidon
Automates the Generation of Hardware Accelerator Modules for Xilinx
Virtex-4 FPGAs; Triton Tool Suite Creates APU-compatible Fabric
Co-processor Modules, Interfaces and the Attending Software Drivers
- Automatically!
NI
Honors Texas Tech University for Greener SUV Design at Challenge X
2005; Students Recognized for Use of Virtual Instrumentation in
Control Design and Simulation at National Competition
Bluespec
Targets Low-Power ESL Synthesis; Added Clock Management, Power
Management and Formal Clock Verification Capabilities Accelerate SoC
Design
Celoxica
Delivers ESL Implementation Path for Altera's HardCopy II Structured
ASICs; Celoxica Introduces C-based ESL Design and Synthesis Flow To
Dramatically Reduce Multi-Million Gate Simulation and Verification
Times
NetLogic
Microsystems Accelerates Move to 400MHz with NL6000 Evaluation Kit
for Network Application Designers
True
Circuits Attends Design Automation Conference, Features Complete
Line of PLL and DLL Intellectual Property for ASIC, FPGA and SoC
Designs
Altera
and Mango DSP Announce Bluejay Video Processing Board Featuring
Stratix II FPGAs
NEC
Electronics Provides ISSP Structured ASIC Customers with Synplicity
Amplify ISSP Pro Software as Part of NEC Electronics' OpenCAD Tool
Suite
June 10, 2005
Poseidon
Design Systems Joins Synopsys in-Sync Program
Synopsys'
Hercules Physical Verification Suite Delivers Near Linear
Performance Increase on More Than Fifty 64-Bit Intel(R) Xeon(TM)
Processors
June 9, 2005
Panasonic Communications Selects Mentor Graphics
Catapult C Synthesis for Network Terminal Equipment
Applications
Fujitsu and Synplicity Launch Amplify AccelArray Pro
Software; Qualified and Recommended Physical Synthesis Software for
Fujitsu AccelArray Structured ASICs
June 8, 2005
Xilinx
Embedded PowerPC Solution Gains Significant Industry
Adoption
Atmel
Brings 'Gigahertz' Digitization Closer to FPGAs With New 10-Bit
2.2GHz LVDS Demultiplexer With 1:4
Outputs | |
Are These Guys Dense, or
What? Newest Class of FPGAs Makes Dense Cool
Context can drastically impact the meaning of a simple
word. If you’re walking down the street minding your own business, you
might find yourself feeling more than a little bit offended if someone
calls you dense. You may even experience a brief but painful flashback to
that dreaded walk through the gauntlet of cool kids lining the halls in
school, hearing any number of rude, if inaccurate, comments (after all,
who’s calling who dense?) thrown with casual abandon in your
direction. Now, change the circumstance. You’re at a tradeshow, heading
back to a demo station in your company’s booth. You find yourself facing
another gauntlet of sorts, but this time it’s lined with people wanting to
see your latest product and admiring its components, including, by the
way, some “wicked dense FPGAs.” Suddenly, dense is cool.
This new class of FPGAs has just two members: Stratix II
from Altera, and Virtex-4 from Xilinx. Although they both carry on their
family names, following Stratix and Virtex-2 Pro, respectively, these 90nm
device families deliver much more than standard generational improvements
over their 130nm forefathers.
As expected, both device families offer higher density,
lower cost per gate, and better performance. But before the vendors could
dazzle us with all the trappings of their new offerings, they had to face
the most daunting (and perhaps most anticipated) hurdle in making a move
to 90nm: power. In an FPGA, power is broken down into two components:
static and dynamic. It used to be that dynamic power (i.e., the power it
takes to perform functions when the chip is running) was the big eater.
But every time process geometry gets smaller, gates get thinner. Thinner
gates leak more current (upping the static power consumption). There was a
concern that if nothing was done to stop the trend, leakage current could
all but take over as the power hog and potentially threaten the long-term
viability of high-density FPGAs. [more]
FPGAs Enabling Consumer Electronics – A
Growing Trend by Suhel Dhanani, Sr. Manager,
Xilinx
It was in the late 1990s that FPGA vendors
first started exploring the low-cost, high-volume consumer market – a
market that generally was ceded to standard, fixed-function devices.
Exploring this market was made possible by the development of FPGAs with
the right balance of features and the migration to advanced process nodes
which helped to drastically reduce FPGA unit costs.
Historically for high-volume, price-sensitive
applications, FPGAs were not the lowest-cost solution. However, as custom
logic and FPGAs started to get pad-limited vs. core-limited, this started
to change. Pad limitation occurs when the size of the die is determined
solely by the number of required I/O pads and not by the amount of logic
in the core. Many custom devices such as ASSPs and ASICs had been pad
limited for some time. At process geometries below 0.5µ, FPGAs started to
get pad limited for the first time. Price is ultimately dictated by die
size - when devices get pad limited, the pricing differential between a
custom and programmable product begins to narrow.
Today low-cost FPGAs are at the forefront of the process
curve with architectures implemented on 90nm process technology. The
relentless march down the process curve, coupled with increasing yields on
larger wafer sizes (e.g. 12”), has resulted in a dramatic decrease in FPGA
costs. For example, the cost per 1000 logic cells for Xilinx 90nm Spartan
Series FPGAs has fallen by a factor of 30 since 1998. [more]
ANNOUNCEMENTS
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