380 research outputs found
Airborne Computer Technology
The development of airborne digital computer has been greatly influenced by rapid technological advances. This paper provides an overview of the present status and the direction of further evolution. It discusses the changes that are taking place in the areas of hardware, software and computer organization; and suggests a number of approaches towards a broadened usage of airborne computer to take advantage of its increasing capability and decreasing cost
JTEC Panel report on electronic manufacturing and packaging in Japan
This report summarizes the status of electronic manufacturing and packaging technology in Japan in comparison to that in the United States, and its impact on competition in electronic manufacturing in general. In addition to electronic manufacturing technologies, the report covers technology and manufacturing infrastructure, electronics manufacturing and assembly, quality assurance and reliability in the Japanese electronics industry, and successful product realization strategies. The panel found that Japan leads the United States in almost every electronics packaging technology. Japan clearly has achieved a strategic advantage in electronics production and process technologies. Panel members believe that Japanese competitors could be leading U.S. firms by as much as a decade in some electronics process technologies
The Assq Chip and Its Progeny
The Assq Chip lives on the memory bus of the Scheme-81 chip of Sussman et al and serves as a utility for the computation of a number of functions concerned with the maintenance of linear tables and lists. Motivated by a desire to apply the design methodology implicit in Scheme-81, it was designed in about two months, has a very simple architecture and layout, and is primarily machine-generated. The chip and the design process are described and evaluated in the context of a proposal to construct a Scheme-to-silicon compiler that automates the design methodology used in the Assq Chip.MIT Artificial Intelligence Laborator
Algorithm to layout (ATL) systems for VLSI design
PhD ThesisThe complexities involved in custom VLSI design together with the
failure of CAD techniques to keep pace with advances in the fabrication
technology have resulted in a design bottleneck. Powerful tools are
required to exploit the processing potential offered by the densities now
available. Describing a system in a high level algorithmic notation
makes writing, understanding, modification, and verification of a design
description easier. It also removes some of the emphasis on the physical
issues of VLSI design, and focus attention on formulating a correct and
well structured design. This thesis examines how current trends in CAD
techniques might influence the evolution of advanced Algorithm To Layout
(ATL) systems. The envisaged features of an example system are
specified. Particular attention is given to the implementation of one
its features COPTS (Compilation Of Occam Programs To Schematics).
COPTS is capable of generating schematic diagrams from which an
actual layout can be derived. It takes a description written in a subset
of Occam and generates a high level schematic diagram depicting its
realisation as a VLSI system. This diagram provides the designer with
feedback on the relative placement and interconnection of the operators
used in the source code. It also gives a visual representation of the
parallelism defined in the Occam description. Such diagrams are a
valuable aid in documenting the implementation of a design.
Occam has also been selected as the input to the design system that
COPTS is a feature of. The choice of Occam was made on the assumption
that the most appropriate algorithmic notation for such a design system
will be a suitable high level programming language. This is in contrast
to current automated VLSI design systems, which typically use a hardware
des~ription language for input. These special purpose languages
currently concentrate on handling structural/behavioural information and
have limited ability to express algorithms. Using a language such as
Occam allows a designer to write a behavioural description which can be
compiled and executed as a simulator, or prototype, of the system. The
programmability introduced into the design process enables designers to
concentrate on a design's underlying algorithm. The choice of this
algorithm is the most crucial decision since it determines the
performance and area of the silicon implementation.
The thesis is divided into four sections, each of several chapters.
The first section considers VLSI design complexity, compares the expert
systems and silicon compilation approaches to tackling it, and examines
its parallels with software complexity. The second section reviews the
advantages of using a conventional programming language for VLSI system
descriptions. A number of alternative high level programming languages
are considered for application in VLSI design. The third section defines
the overall ATL system COPTS is envisaged to be part of, and considers
the schematic representation of Occam programs. The final section
presents a summary of the overall project and suggestions for future work
on realising the full ATL system
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