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The Inevitability of Reconfigurable Systems
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Volume 1 ,  Issue 7  (October 2003) table of contents
Power Management
FEATURE: Q focus: Power Management table of contents
Pages: 34 - 43  
Year of Publication: 2003
ISSN:1542-7730
Authors
Nick Tredennick  Guilder Technology Report
Brion Shimamoto
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

The introduction of the microprocessor in 1971 marked the beginning of a 30-year stall in design methods for electronic systems. The industry is coming out of the stall by shifting from programmed to reconfigurable systems. In programmed systems, a linear sequence of configuration bits, organized into blocks called instructions, configures fixed hardware to mimic custom hardware. In reconfigurable systems, the physical connections among logic elements change with time to mimic custom hardware. The transition to reconfigurable systems will be wrenching, but this is inevitable as the design emphasis shifts from cost performance to cost performance per watt. Here’s the story.


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