loading...
Hardware-Software Codesign
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/MDT.1997.10004January-March 1997 (vol. 14 no. 1) pp. 75-83
 This Article 
 
PDF
HTML
IEEE Xplore Subscribers
 
 Share 
   
 Bibliographic References 
   
 Add to: 
 
Digg
Furl
Spurl
Blink
Simpy
Google
Del.icio.us
Y!MyWeb
 
 Search 
   

Hardware-software codesign has become a strategic technology for modern electronic systems, from single VLSI chips containing embedded cores to large distributed systems made of a heterogeneous network of processors communicating via sophisticated protocols. Codesign is the key enabling technology but may also be the bottleneck for faster progress in digital systems, especially signal processing ones.

In a roundtable held last June in Las Vegas at the Design Automation Conference, participants looked at the problems, methodologies, strategies, and future of codesign.

D&T thanks participants David Agnew (Bell-Northern Research), Rolf Ernst (Technical University of Braunschweig), Randolph E. Harr (DARPA/ETO), Vijay Nagasamy (VSIS, Inc.), Pierre Paulin (SGS-Thomson), Jerry S. Sullivan (Design Technologies), Hiroto Yasuura (Kyushu University). Our moderator was Daniel D. Gajski (University of California, Irvine). Robert P. Larsen (UC, Irvine) and D&T Editor-in-Chief Ken Wagner also attended.

ACM SIGDA sponsored the roundtable, and the Design Automation Conference provided the facilities. Kaushik Roy (Purdue University and D&T's Roundtable editor) organized the event.

Citation:
"Hardware-Software Codesign," IEEE Design and Test of Computers, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 75-83, Jan.-Mar. 1997, doi:10.1109/MDT.1997.10004
Usage of this product signifies your acceptance of the Terms of Use.