От: fpga journal update [news@fpgajournal.com]
Отправлено: 13 июля 2004 г. 23:17
Кому: Michael Dolinsky
Тема: FPGA Journal Update Vol IV No 02


a techfocus media publication :: July 13, 2004 :: volume IV, no. 02


FROM THE EDITOR

This week we went one-on-one with a pioneer of programmable logic, Lattice CEO Cyrus Tsui. Lattice is creating quite a stir these days with a string of new product announcements putting them smack-dab in the middle of the battle for the emerging low-cost, high-volume market.

Next we have an article from Intersil on providing power for all these FPGAs we’re designing. As FPGAs get more complex, the power requirements get trickier as well. John Krehbiel gives us an overview of the topic.

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

Monday, July 12, 2004

Actel Welcomes New Design Services Companies to Solution Partners Program

Altera Cyclone Devices Selected for AMX Modero ViewPoint Touch Panels

Xilinx Rated Number One in the Industry by FPGA Designers

Altium Presents 'System-on-FPGA' Webcast

Thursday, July 8, 2004

Altera Announces Multi-Channel SONET/SDH and PDH Solutions From Newest AMPP Partner, Aliathon

U.S. Department of Defense JTRS Joint Program Office Completes Successful Port of Cluster 1 Waveform to Spectrum Signal Processing flexComm SDR-3000 Platform

Wednesday, July 7, 2004

Altera Introduces Quartus II Software Version 4.1

Opal-RT Launches OP5000: FPGA-based I/O Products for RT-LAB Engineering Simulators

Nallatech Brings Super Computer Performance to Network Processing Applications

eASIC Corporation Awarded 10th Patent for its Configurable Structured ASIC Technology

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Register for Altera's "ASIC Design Alternatives: Using New Low-Cost FPGAs for System Integration" Net Seminar. This free net seminar will focus on how to reduce overall costs through system integration and minimize exposure to risk by using FPGAs.

Click here for more information.

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CURRENT FEATURE ARTICLES

Cyrus Tsui
Lattice's
Intrepid Leader
Powering FPGA-based Boards
by John Krehbiel, Intersil
Terminology Tango 101
From Dog Gates to Marketing Megahertz
High-Performance DSP Capability Within an Optimized Low-Cost FPGA Architecture
by Gordon Hands, Strategic Marketing Manager, Lattice Semiconductor Corporation
Ken McElvain

Soul of Synplicity
Low Cost Leapfrog

New FPGAs Jump into the High Volume Arena
Semi-Programmable
New Architectures Optimize the Mix
Xilinx Goes Retro
Moving Ahead by Looking Back
Prototype to Production
Structured ASIC Lowers Cost and Power
by Dave Larson, AMI Semiconductor
DAC's Dangerous Undertones
Winds of Change in EDA
Cool and Groovy at DAC
What's Hot in Design Automation

Cyrus Tsui
Lattice's Intrepid Leader

Cyrus Tsui doesn’t believe in the “Flanking Attack.” He likes the head-on confrontation, even with an entrenched opponent. He’s not intimidated by numbers or humbled by setbacks. He is a true competitor, and has been in the industry long enough to know that the rules of the game change regularly. This month, Lattice Semiconductor, where Cyrus has been CEO for over 15 years, made its most significant strategic announcement in years, challenging industry leaders head-on in what promises to be one of the most aggressive and lucrative battles of the decade for new market share in programmable logic – the emerging low-cost, high-volume segment.

Lattice has long been respected for its CPLD and PLD offerings, and has made a strong business selling the parts. Cyrus was actually a pioneer in PLDs, working at MMI in the 1970s when the first PAL devices were introduced. “At MMI we were making many different kinds of memories, primarily bipolar PROMs,” says Cyrus. “As we looked at various technologies, we started to investigate AND-OR functions as a way to do math with a PROM. It turned out to be an inherently efficient way to implement logic. We defined an efficient architecture and went looking for customers to prove the concept.”

They found one of their early customers in about 1979 at Data General, on the mini-computer project that was the subject of Tracy Kidder’s Pulitzer-prize-winning book, “The Soul of a New Machine.” MMI marketing took in samples and got the customer excited. The design team then had to deliver the devices for production. “We were aiming for a $5 price, but ultimately we had to charge $50 due to yield problems,” Cyrus recalls. “We also missed our delivery date, and that held up their project. From that experience I learned something that benefited me for the rest of my career. Lattice has never announced a part that it can’t deliver.” [more]


Powering FPGA-based Boards
by John Krehbiel, Intersil

Increased gate counts and higher clock speeds in programmable logic ICs have resulted in higher current requirements while smaller device geometries are driving lower core supply voltages. Simultaneously, new communications and memory technologies (DDR, DDR2) are requiring additional new supply voltages. Table 1 shows this low voltage trend in the generational progression of Xilinx FPGAs (Field Programmable Gate Arrays).

These trends are forcing board designers to utilize more and higher performance power supplies. Fortunately, the latest generation of low voltage power management ICs are keeping pace with the challenges presented by these high-performance boards.

Power Requirements of the Latest Generation of FPGAs

A large part of the value of FPGAs is their flexibility. For example, Altera offers 14 different products in their Stratix/Stratix GX family of FPGAs. These products range in functionality from 10,570 logic elements (LEs) to over 79,000 LEs. (2) In terms of power consumption, the smallest version clocking at less than 100MHz will require less than 1Amp of peak current for the core logic (at 1.5V), whereas the largest version will require almost 14Amps for the core logic when clocked at 300MHz (3). Xilinx’s latest generations of FPGAs are offered in an even wider range of capabilities and power requirements. [more]


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