Plenary Session I
8:30am-11:50am
Co-Chairs:
Kris Verma, ISQED Plenary Chair
Res Saleh, ISQED Conference Chair
8:30am
Welcome and Introduction
8:45am
1P.1 IP REUSE QUALITY: “Intellectual Property” or “Intense Pain?”
John Chilton
Sr. VP and General Manager
As systems on a chip become more complex, reuse of
third-party intellectual property (IP) becomes more necessary to meet
time-to-market deadlines. However,
issues surrounding IP quality are very much unresolved. Poor IP quality is the key reason why many IP users feel that “IP” is
actually an acronym for “Intense Pain.”
9:25am
1P.2 Why Integrated Yield Management is a Necessity
Y. David Lepejian
President, CEO and Chairman of the Board, HPL
Improving semiconductor yield is a multi-facetted process that must include design, manufacturing, and test. An integrated approach enables companies to rapidly reach higher levels of revenue and profitability. Incorporating design-for-yield concepts early, improving the quality of the test programs, and applying new technology to accelerate the measurement and correction of failure sources in the production process combine to have powerful effect upon company profits, product quality, and time to volume.
10:05am
Break
10:30am
1P.3 Design Success: Foundry Perspective
Jim Kupec
President UMC USA
Leading
edge foundries are rolling out new process technologies every two years with
today's advance processes capable of producing a quarter billion transistor on a
thumb-nail sized chip.
11:10am
1P.4 What you don’t know CAN hurt you: Designing for survival in a sub-wavelength environment
Y.C. (Buno) Pati
President and CEO, Numerical Technologies
The
semiconductor industry’s promise to deliver an endless array of chip designs
to match the voracious appetite for smaller, faster, cheaper devices is in
danger of ringing hollow. We could make this commitment with confidence up
to recently. But, lately we’ve hit the wall. We’re crashing
through the sub-wavelength barrier and we’re feeling our way toward designing
and manufacturing chips in a challenging new environment without benefit of some
key process technologies. Now, to survive and thrive, chipmakers are
turning to phase shifting—just a novel, clever concept a few short years
ago—as a critical and necessary enabler of producing integrated circuits at
dimensions of 0.13 micron and below. Inevitably, chip designers are
following suit, not just to match the chipmakers in their march to smaller
feature sizes, but to polish their own competitive edge with high-performance
chip designs that are easy to produce. They’re breaking out of a
somewhat isolated mold, knowing that shrinking design times and increasing
layout complexity call for new tools and expertise. Most acknowledge that
the success of their designs, and indeed, their future viability depends on
quickly adopting the tools and expertise that their chip making customers are
using so effectively.
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