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ICCAD 20th Anniversary: Top Computer-Aided Design Innovations & Breakthroughs | CAD Software for Engineers, Architects & Product Designers
ICCAD 20th Anniversary: Top Computer-Aided Design Innovations & Breakthroughs | CAD Software for Engineers, Architects & Product Designers

ICCAD 20th Anniversary: Top Computer-Aided Design Innovations & Breakthroughs | CAD Software for Engineers, Architects & Product Designers

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Description

In 2002, the International Conference on Computer Aided Design (ICCAD) celebrates its 20th anniversary. This book commemorates contributions made by ICCAD to the broad field of design automation during that time. The foundation of ICCAD in 1982 coincided with the growth of Large Scale Integration. The sharply increased functionality of board-level circuits led to a major demand for more powerful Electronic Design Automation (EDA) tools. At the same time, LSI grew quickly and advanced circuit integration became widely avail­ able. This, in turn, required new tools, using sophisticated modeling, analysis and optimization algorithms in order to manage the evermore complex design processes. Not surprisingly, during the same period, a number of start-up com­ panies began to commercialize EDA solutions, complementing various existing in-house efforts. The overall increased interest in Design Automation (DA) re­ quired a new forum for the emerging community of EDA professionals; one which would be focused on the publication of high-quality research results and provide a structure for the exchange of ideas on a broad scale. Many of the original ICCAD volunteers were also members of CANDE (Computer-Aided Network Design), a workshop of the IEEE Circuits and Sys­ tem Society. In fact, it was at a CANDE workshop that Bill McCalla suggested the creation of a conference for the EDA professional. (Bill later developed the name).

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
How far we have come in twenty years! In Computer Aided Design, this is a collection of papers that have made key contributions to the advancement of the field. Historic significance.From the early usages of Spice (and its derivatives) to model simple, small electronic circuits. Typically then (early 80s), there was no graphical interface. You had to manually construct netlists for your circuit and then submit this text file to Spice. Clumsy and slow. But still a vast improvement over not having it. Then, as most papers show, graphical interfaces became common. First in monochrome, then quickly to colour.You can see the influence of the Conway-Mead approach to generalising VLSI design so that undergraduates could use it to make chips. A vast step at the time, though taken for granted now. The papers show chronologically how the size of the circuits and of entire chips, grew steadily, pacing the growth of the power of the workstation modelling hardware and software. So that now it is possible to model 100 million transistor chips!For those who might wonder if the field has any more to offer, the concluding papers give good descriptions of the challenges ahead. Difficult, certainly. But not more so than those overcome by the earlier papers.