“DAC is delighted to welcome these distinguished technology and business leaders as our keynote speakers this year,” said Andrew B. Kahng, General Chair of the 46th DAC Executive Committee. “Each has provided inspiration and vision to our industry throughout multiple successful careers as technologist, business leader, and entrepreneur. Dr. Hsu has a truly unique perspective on future business models for design, manufacturing and the overall semiconductor industry. Dr. Dally’s work has made throughput-optimized processing a reality, and his vision for future architectures as well as EDA challenges and opportunities is certain to be of great interest to attendees.”
Fu-Chieh Hsu’s keynote will focus on the new complexity barrier facing the semiconductor industry. He will discuss how the industry’s key challenges are no longer discrete issues that can be addressed by point-tool solutions, but instead demand new breakthrough technologies and integrated EDA solutions. His talk will outline a new collaborative business model that is part of the solution required for the IC design and manufacturing ecosystem to collectively meet these emerging challenges.
Bill Dally will address the future of throughput-optimized processors, such as graphics processing units (GPUs), which today have hundreds of cores and will have thousands of cores by 2015. He will describe challenges and opportunities for the EDA world that are inherent in the architecture and programming of future throughput processors, and also give examples of exploiting parallelism and locality drawn from the Imagine and Merrimac projects, from NVIDIA GPUs, and from three generations of stream programming systems.
In the keynote panel, leading EDA CEOs Aart de Geus of Synopsys, Inc., Walden C. Rhines of Mentor Graphics Corp. and Lip-Bu Tan of Cadence Design Systems, Inc. will share their views on the outlook for EDA in light of the current economic climate and the perennial challenges faced by the industry. The panel will be moderated by Juan-Antonio Carballo, a partner with IBM Venture Capital Group and Worldwide Manager, IBM Microelectronics Services.
Speaker Biographies
Fu-Chieh Hsu, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Ltd. (TSMC)
Dr. Fu-Chieh Hsu has served as Vice President of Design and Technology Platform for TSMC since April 2006. He is responsible for all design service operations at TSMC and works with the Marketing and R&D departments to provide customers with technology platform solutions.
Dr. Hsu founded Monolithic System Tech. Inc. (MoSys) in 1991 and served as its Chairman and Chief Executive Officer until retiring at the end of 2004. He was Chairman and President of Myson Technology Inc. (now Myson Century Inc.) from 1990 to 1991. Prior to that, Dr. Hsu worked at Integrated Device Tech. Inc. as Chief Technology Officer and Vice President as well as other senior positions. Dr. Hsu also served at Hewlett-Packard Labs.
Dr. Hsu has published or contributed to more than 40 papers and also holds 55 U.S. patents. Dr. Hsu received his Bachelor of Science degree in electrical engineering from the National Taiwan University in 1978, and Master of Science and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering and computer sciences from University of California, Berkeley, in 1981 and 1983, respectively.
Bill Dally, NVIDIA
Bill Dally joined NVIDIA in January 2009 as chief scientist, after spending 12 years at Stanford University, where he was chairman of the computer science department. Dally and his Stanford team developed the system architecture, network architecture, signaling, routing and synchronization technology that is found in most large parallel computers today.
Dally was previously at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1986 to 1997, where he and his team built the J-Machine and the M-Machine, experimental parallel computer systems that pioneered the separation of mechanism from programming models and demonstrated very low overhead synchronization and communication mechanisms. From 1983 to 1986, he was at California Institute of Technology (CalTech), where he designed the MOSSIM Simulation Engine and the Torus Routing chip, which pioneered “wormhole” routing and virtual-channel flow control.
Dally is a cofounder of Velio Communications and Stream Processors. He
is a member of the National Academy of Engineering, a Fellow of the
American Academy of Arts & Sciences, a Fellow of the IEEE and the ACM,
and has received the IEEE Seymour Cray Award and the ACM Maurice Wilkes
award. He has published over 200 papers, holds over 50 issued patents,
and is an author of two textbooks.