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The John Henry Syndrome (panel session)(abstract only): humans vs. machines as FPGA designers
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Source International Symposium on Field Programmable Gate Arrays archive
Proceedings of the 2000 ACM/SIGDA eighth international symposium on Field programmable gate arrays table of contents
Monterey, California, United States
Page: 101  
Year of Publication: 2000
ISBN:1-58113-193-3
Authors
Ray Andraka  Andraka Consulting
Philip Friedin  GuideTech, Inc.
Satnam Singh  Xilinx Corporation
Tim Southgate  Altera Corporation
Chairmen
Herman Schmit  Carnegie Mellon University
Sponsor
SIGDA: ACM Special Interest Group on Design Automation
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

Human designers have done amazing things with FPGAs. These designs challenge our assumptions about the speeds and densities acheivable by programmable hardware. But with multi-million gate designs and increasingly complex FPGA architectures is there really any place for the hand-crafted design anymore? Is there a way that CAD tools can incorporate the techniques and knowledge of designers to create high-density, high-performance implementations automatically? Or will the tools and architectures always lag the applications, thereby guaranteeing abundant job opportunities for FPGA design experts?


Collaborative Colleagues:
Ray Andraka: colleagues
Philip Friedin: colleagues
Satnam Singh: colleagues
Tim Southgate: colleagues
Herman Schmit: colleagues