44th Design Automation Conference to Feature Two Workshops Addressing Low Power
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44th Design Automation Conference to Feature Two Workshops Addressing Low Power

BOULDER, Colo.—(BUSINESS WIRE)—April 24, 2007— The 44th Design Automation Conference (DAC), to be held at the San Diego Convention Center, San Diego, Calif., June 4 - 8, 2007, will offer two workshops on low power design on Sunday, June 3. The Low Power Coalition (LPC) Workshop -- Standards for Low Power Design Intent, to be held Sunday from 12:30 - 3:30 p.m., will present the benefits of using the Common Power Format (CPF) specification to capture and communicate low power constraints throughout the IC design flow. This workshop also will cover some of the recent activity and planned roadmap of the LPC. Later that day, from 4:00 - 7:00 p.m., the Design and Verification of Low Power ICs workshop will be held, providing information for engineers and tool developers on the Unified Power Format (UPF), including its purpose, technical constructs and usage. Leading EDA suppliers also will illustrate UPF interoperability in a multi-vendor flow.

"DAC provides the industry with tremendous opportunities for exchanging information on current design challenges and emerging issues," said Steve Levitan, general chair of the 44th annual DAC. "The fact that there are two workshops on low power design at DAC this year underscores the importance of the topic and the value of attending DAC to get details on all of the latest developments in design."

Workshop Agenda: Low Power Coalition Workshop -- Standards for Low Power Design Intent

Sunday, June 3, 2007, 12:30 - 3:30 p.m. / Room: 6D
  I. Introduction to the Low Power Coalition: Gill Watt - Chairman of

the LPC, AMD, Boston, MA
II. Overview of CPF: Qi Wang - Cadence Design Systems, Inc., San
Jose, CA
III. Convergence Activities with other Power-Aware Formats: Gary Delp
- LSI Logic Corp., Rochester, MN
IV. Library Considerations for Low Power: Rob Aitken - ARM Ltd,
Sunnyvale, CA
V. End-user Experiences: Herve Menager - NXP, San Jose, CA
VI. EDA Tool Developers for Low Power: Dave Allen - Atrenta, San
Jose, CA; Devadas Varma, Calypto Design Systems, Inc., Santa
Clara, CA and Tom Miller - Sequence Design, Inc., Santa Clara,
CA
VII. Panel Discussion (all presenters)


Workshop Agenda: Design and Verification of Low Power ICs

Sunday, June 3, 2007, 4:00 - 7:00 p.m. / Room: 6E
  I. Introduction: Yatin Trivedi - Director, Industry Partnership

Program, Magma Design Automation, Inc., San Jose, CA
II. Customer Perspective: David Peterman - Manager, Wireless
Terminals Business Unit EDA, Texas Instruments Inc., Dallas, TX
III. Brief History of Low Power Standards: Shrenik Mehta - Accellera
Chair; Senior Director, Frontend Technologies & OpenSPARC
Program, Sun Microsystems, Inc., Sunnyvale, CA; Edward Rashba -
Director, New Business Ventures, IEEE Standards Association,
Piscataway, NJ
IV. Technical Content of Low Power Standard: Stephen Bailey - Product
Marketing Manager, Verification, Mentor Graphics Corp.,
Wilsonville, OR and Gary Delp - Distinguished Engineer, LSI
Logic Corp., Rochester, MN
V. Low Power Solution Flow for Design and Verification: Mike
Keating, Synopsys Fellow, Synopsys, Inc., Mountain View, CA;
Juergen Karmann - Senior Staff Engineer Design Methodology,
Automotive, Industrial & Multimarket, Infineon Technologies AG,
Munich, Germany
VI. Interoperability in Action: A Multi-Vendor Collaborative Solution
VII. Roundtable and Wrap-up


Registration

Workshop registration is available online now in the registration section of the DAC Web site at www.dac.com. The registration fee for each workshop is $75 for ACM and IEEE members, $100 per person for non-members. Workshop registration is not included in DAC conference registration, nor is conference registration required to attend any of the workshops.

About DAC

The Design Automation Conference (DAC) is the premier educational and networking event for Electronic Design Automation (EDA) and silicon solutions. More than 11,000 designers, developers, researchers, academics and managers from leading electronics companies and universities from around the world attend. DAC features close to 60 technical sessions covering the latest research on design methodologies and technologies, EDA tool developments and trends selected by a diverse committee of electronic design experts. A highlight is its Exhibition and Suite area with approximately 250 of the leading and emerging EDA, silicon and IP providers. More details about DAC are available at: www.dac.com.

Contact:

Weber Shandwick
Emily Taylor, 503-552-3733
Email Contact