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What will system level design be when it grows up?
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Source International Conference on Hardware Software Codesign archive
Proceedings of the 3rd IEEE/ACM/IFIP international conference on Hardware/software codesign and system synthesis table of contents
Jersey City, NJ, USA
PANEL SESSION: Panel 1 table of contents
Pages: 123 - 123  
Year of Publication: 2005
ISBN:1-59593-161-9
Authors
Grant Martin  Tensilica
Daniel Gajski  UC Irvine
David Goodwin  Tensilica
Patrick Lysaght  Xilinx Research
Peter Marwedel  University of Dortmund, Germany
Mike Muller  ARM, UK
Jeff Welser  IBM
Sponsors
SIGDA: ACM Special Interest Group on Design Automation
SIGBED: ACM Special Interest Group on Embedded Systems
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

We have seen a growing new interest in Electronic System Level (ESL) architectures, design methods, tools and implementation fabrics in the last few years. But the picture of what types and approaches to building embedded systems will become the most widely-accepted norms in the future remains fuzzy at best. Everyone want to know where systems and system design is going "when it grows up", if it ever "grows up". Some of the key questions that need to be answered include which applications will be key system drivers, what SW & HW architectures will suit best, how programmable and configurable will they be, will systems designers need to deal with physical implementation issues or will that be hidden behind fabric abstractions and programming models, and what will those abstractions and models be? Moreover, will these abstractions stabilize and be still useful as the underlying technology keeps developing at high speed.This panel consists of proponents of a number of alternative visions for where we will end up, and how we will get there.


Collaborative Colleagues:
Grant Martin: colleagues
Daniel Gajski: colleagues
David Goodwin: colleagues
Patrick Lysaght: colleagues
Peter Marwedel: colleagues
Mike Muller: colleagues
Jeff Welser: colleagues