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CSSI in the News
| Mar. 2008 |
ECE Team Takes Third Place in IC Design Challenge Phase One
ECE graduate students Abhishek Jajoo, John Reinke and Leon Wang have
been awarded the 3rd prize in the Phase
1 of the 2007-2008 SRC/SIA IC Design Challenge. Their contest entry
integrates their Ph.D. research in RF MEMS devices and circuits into
an implementable design for "A
Tunable Multiband RF MEMS Transceiver
Front-End." (More info...) |
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| Nov 2007 |
Mitra, Perrott and Rutenbar speak at DARPA Reliability Workshop
Subhasish
Mitra (Stanford), Mike Perrot (MIT) and Rob Rutenbar (CMU) gave invited
talks at the DARPA LIBRA Workshop on Reliable System Design from Unreliable
Components, held in Arlington, VA. Mitra spoke about early failure
diagnosis in digital systems. Perrot spoke about design solutions for
analog/RF circuits based on scaled digital devices; Rutenbar spoke
on fast techniques for SRAM reliability analysis. Mitra works in the
C2S2 Digital Circuits & Systems Theme. Perrot works in the C2S2
Analog Circuits and Interfaces Theme. Rutenbar is Director of C2S2
and also works in the C2S2 Silicon Infrastructure Theme.
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| Feb. 2008 |
Blanton named director of CSSI
Professor of ECE Shawn Blanton is the new director of the Center
for Silicon System Implementation (CSSI).
Blanton succeeds Larry Pileggi, Tanoto Professor of ECE, who served
as director since 2000.
CSSI is focused on all aspects of chip design spanning the spectrum
from system-level architectures to analog/digital circuits, to the
physics and the modeling of the complexities found in semiconductor
manufacturing.
Blanton joined the Carnegie Mellon faculty in 1995 after earning a
doctorate in computer science and engineering at the University of
Michigan. In 2006, he was awarded an Emerald Award for outstanding
leadership in recruiting and mentoring minorities for advanced degrees
in science and technology. The Emerald Awards, sponsored by Science
Spectrum magazine, are recognized as the premier awards for African
Americans, Hispanics, Asian Americans and Native Americans working
in the research sciences.
Blanton is the leader of the Carnegie Mellon Laboratory on Integrated
Systems Test, which uses the physical design description of integrated
circuits to identify and characterize defects. Research results from
his lab are currently being employed by companies that include Intel
and IBM, and currently being commercialized in the Carnegie Mellon
spin-out TestWorks.
CSSI has 18 participating faculty from the Departments of Electrical
and Computer Engineering, Computer Science and Mechanical Engineering,
and over 60 graduate students.
CSSI was formed in 2000 upon the infrastructure of the Center for
Electronic Design Automation (CEDA) which grew out of the Semiconductor
Research Corporation-Carnegie Mellon Research Center for Computer-Aided
Design founded in 1982.
In his role as director of CSSI, Pileggi re-focused the center on
silicon system design and optimization.
This led to the center's participation in two FCRP-funded multi-university
research centers: The Center for Circuit & System Solutions (C2S2)
and The Gigascale Systems Research Center (GSRC). In addition, the
CSSI is supported by DARPA, NSF and industry.
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| Jan. 2008 |
Singhee,
Wang, Calhoun and Rutenbar win Best Paper
Award at 2008 VLSI Conference
C2S2
researchers Amith Singhee and Rob A.
Rutenbar (CMU), and Jiajing Wang and
Benton H. Calhoun (University of Virginia)
are winners of the 2008 Best Student
Paper Award at the 21st International
Conference on VLSI Design. Their paper, "Recursive
Statistical Blockade: An Enhanced Technique
for Rare Event Simulation with Application
to SRAM Circuit Design," extends
the teams highly visible work on ultra-fast
analysis of memory circuits to handle
extremely difficult "rare
event" statistics.
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| Nov 2007 |
Mitra,
Perrott and Rutenbar speak at DARPA Reliability
Workshop
Subhasish
Mitra (Stanford), Mike Perrot (MIT) and
Rob Rutenbar (CMU) gave invited talks
at the DARPA LIBRA Workshop on Reliable
System Design from Unreliable Components,
held in Arlington, VA. Mitra spoke about
early failure diagnosis in digital systems.
Perrot spoke about design solutions for
analog/RF circuits based on scaled digital
devices; Rutenbar spoke on fast techniques
for SRAM reliability analysis. Mitra works in the C2S2 Digital Circuits & Systems
Theme. Perrot works in the C2S2 Analog
Circuits and Interfaces Theme. Rutenbar
is Director of C2S2 and also works in
the C2S2 Silicon Infrastructure Theme.
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| Nov 2007 |
ACM
Fellow
ECE Professor Donald
Thomas was appointed an Association for Computing
Machinery (ACM) Fellow "for contributions to computer-aided design
of integrated circuits and systems." The ACM Fellows Program recognizes
and honors outstanding members for their
achievements in computer science and information technology
and for their significant contributions
to the mission of the ACM, reported their website.
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| Nov
2007 |
Most
Influential Work of the DATE conference
A
paper written by Associate Professor
of ECE Radu Marculescu and
his former graduate student Jingcao Hu (Ph.D. 2005)
was selected for a book featuring the
most influential work over 10 years of
the Design Automation and Test in Europe
(DATE) conference. The research, entitled "Exploiting the Routing Flexibility
for Energy-Performance Aware Mapping
of Regular NoC Architectures" was
selected for 2003; only three papers
were chosen from each year. (More info...) |
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| Oct 2007 |
Singhee and Rutenbar Win DATE Best Paper Award
CMU
researchers Amith Singhee and Prof. Rob
Rutenbar have the 2007 Best Paper Award at the Design Automation and
Test in Europe (DATE) conference. DATE is Europe's premier conference
for IC design tools. Their paper, "Statistical
Blockade: A Novel Method for Very Fast Monte Carlo Simulation of Rare
Circuit Events and its Application," discusses how to dramatically
accelerate the analysis of statistical
reliability in scaled memory circuits. This work is part of the C2S2
Silicon Infrastructure Theme.
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| Oct 2007 |
Joint C2S2/GSRC Workshop on Test held at ITC 2007
A special
workshop on testing, jointly organized
by Shawn Blanton of C2S2 and Tim Cheng of GSRC, was held in conjunction
with the International Test Conference (ITC) in Santa Clara, CA. Talks
from across FCRP universities (UCSB, Texas A&M, GA Tech, Florida,
Stanford, CMU) focused on problems in some of the more difficult domains
of testing: analog, RF, millimeter wave, reliability issues, and MEMS.
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| Oct 2007 |
FCRP Center Directors Rutenbar, Rabaey and Wang speak at NSF Workshop
on Nanoelectronics
FCRP Center Directors Rob Rutenbar
(C2S2), Jan Rabaey (GSRC) and Kang Wang
(FENA) all spoke at the NSF Workshop on Nanoelectronics, held in Washington,
DC this week. Organized by NSF Program Manager Pinaki Mazumder, the
workshop brought together researchers from across the nanodevices,
nanoelectronics, and nanoCAD disciplines to share ideas for where the
field should evolve.
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| Oct 2007 |
Rob Rutenbar gives keynote talk at ASPDAC07
CMU Prof. Rob Rutenbar gave they keynote talk at the 2007 Asia South
Pacific Design Automation Conference (ASPDAC) in Yokohama, Japan.
His talk, entitled "Next-Generation
Design and EDA Challenges: Small Physics, Big Systems, Tall Toolchains" focused
on challenges in devices, circuits, systems, and tools, as we continue to scale
CMOS.
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| Oct 2007 |
Larry Pileggi Wins Industrial Impact Award from GSRC
CMU Prof. Larry Pileggi has been awarded the 2007 Richard Newton GSRC Industrial
Impact Award, which acknowledges work from the FCRP Gigascale Systems Research
Center (GSRC). This inaugural award, named in memory of Richard Newton, the founding
director of the GSRC and former dean of the College of Engineering at U.C. Berkeley,
is in recognition of research that is "at least five years old and has had
significant industrial impact."An industrial panel selected Pileggi's research
entitled "Via Programmable Regular Gate Arrays for Manufacturability," which
was reported at the GSRC annual review in 2002. Other Carnegie Mellon affiliated
faculty and students who received this award with Pileggi are Herman Schmit,
Veerbhan Kheterpal, Aneesh Koorapaty, and Kim Yaw Tong. This honor is one of
two new annual awards that were first presented during this year's GSRC Annual
Symposium. Pileggi is a founding member of the C2S2 Executive Committee, a former
member of GSRC, and currently leads the C2S2 Silicon Infrastructure Theme.
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| Sept 2007 |
C2S2 Workshop on SRAM Design Held at MIT
A
C2S2-sponsored workshop on issues
in scaled SRAM design, organized by MIT Prof. Anantha Chandrakasan
and CMU Prof. Rob Rutenbar attracted over 50 attendees to the meeting,
held at MIT. Speakers from academia (UVa, Berkeley, CMU, Purdue and
MIT) and industry (AMD, IBM, Intel, TI, and Xilinx) convened to share
ideas about future SRAM architectures that must work at the most
aggressively scaled CMOS nodes.
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| Sept 2007 |
Wojciech Maly Wins SRC Aristotle Award for Outstanding
Teaching
C2S2 researcher Wojciech Maly of CMU is the 2007 winner of the prestigious Aristotle
Award for innovative teaching from the Semiconductor Research Corporation (parent
of the Focus Center Research Program, and C2S2). The award was presented at
the SRC TechCon meeting, on Sept. 11 in Austin, Texas.
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| July 2007 |
Wojciech Maly Wins SRC Aristotle Award for Outstanding
Teaching
C2S2 researcher Wojciech Maly of CMU is the 2007 winner of the
prestigious Aristotle Award for innovative teaching from the Semiconductor
Research Corporation (parent of the Focus Center Research Program,
and C2S2). The award was presented at the SRC TechCon meeting, on
Sept. 11 in Austin, Texas.
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| July 2007 |
Graduate Student Fellowship Established in Memory of
Alumna
ECE remembers alumna Margarida Jacome, who passed away on May
25 after battling cancer for
several months. Margarida was an ECE Professor and Temple Foundation
Fellow at The University of Texas (UT) at Austin. She earned her
Ph.D. in ECE at Carnegie Mellon University in 1993 and received B.S.
and M.S. degrees from the Technical University of Lisbon in Portugal.
Her research focused on embedded computing, hardware/software co-design,
and high-level synthesis.
To commemorate Margarida Jacome's passion for her research and her
students, the ECE Departments at both Carnegie Mellon and UT Austin
have established a joint graduate student fellowship in her name.
"Margarida was one of the most energetic, positive energy
persons who I have ever met. She was the ideal academic colleague,
and simply the best friend one could have," said Larry
Pileggi, Tanoto Professor of ECE at Carnegie Mellon.
"She was a very vibrant person who you just liked instantly," remembered
Pileggi. She remained devoted to her students throughout her illness: "After
Margarida learned that she had terminal cancer, her primary concern
was to work with her graduate students who were closest to graduation
to finish their theses."
Pileggi met Jacome after he graduated
from Carnegie Mellon with his Ph.D., the year before she started
at the university, under the guidance of then Department Head (and
later Dean of the College of Engineering) Steven Director as her
research advisor. As students, Pileggi and Jacome shared similar
research interests and both were affiliated with the Center for Electronic
Design Automation (CEDA) at Carnegie Mellon, which preceded the Center
for Silicon System Implementation (CSSI), which Pileggi now directs.
When Jacome graduated from Carnegie
Mellon, Pileggi was a faculty member at UT Austin. He was very impressed
by her work and recruited her for a software engineering position.
As part of the UT Austin faculty, Jacome received the National Science
Foundation CAREER Award. She was an associate editor of the *IEEE
Transactions on Computer-Aided Design of Integrated Circuits and
Systems (IEEE TCAD)* and guest edited a special issue of the *ACM
Transactions on Embedded Computing Systems (TECS)* on power aware
embedded computing.
Recently, Jacome was a member of the executive committee of the
IEEE/ACM International Conference on Computer-Aided Design (ICCAD),
serving as the nano-initiative chair last year. Additionally, Jacome
worked on the technical program committees of many other conferences
and won several best paper awards. Her paper "Exploring
Performance Tradeoffs for Clustered VLIW ASIPs" was included
in the book "The Best of ICCAD - 20 Years of Excellence
in Computer Aided Design."
"We are all deeply shocked at her passing on but we are
left with fond memories of her
presence, character, hard work,
and technical prowess - she was
loved by everyone who came across
her," wrote
Anthony Ambler, Chairman of the
ECE Department at UT Austin,
in a news release.
Contributions to the fellowship in Jacome's memory may be made out
to "The University of Texas," marked "For
Margarida," and mailed to:
Anthony P. Ambler
1 University Station C0803
ENS Room 236
Austin, TX 78712-0240"
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| June 2007 |
Awards at the IEEE/ACM Design Automation Conference
(DAC)
Several faculty members from
the ECE Department won awards at the 44th Annual IEEE/ACM Design
Automation Conference (DAC) on June 4-8 in San Diego. DAC is the
premier electronic design automation (EDA) and silicon solution
event.
Rob Rutenbar won the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society Industrial
Pioneer Award, Randal Bryant received the IEEE Emanuel R. Piore Award,
and Donald Thomas won an ACM/SIGDA Distinguished Service Award. Radu
and Diana Marculescu's paper on "Voltage-Frequency Island
Partitioning for GALS-based Networks-on-Chip" was nominated
for a Best Paper Award; the research
was co-authored with ECE graduate students Umit Ogras and Puru Choudhary.
Only 15 papers were nominated out of the 161manuscripts accepted
(713 were submitted).
Diana Marculescu served as the ACM/SIGDA representative on the executive
committee and sat on the strategic planning and the tutorial committees;
she was also on the program committee along with Radu Marculescu
and Rob Rutenbar.
Many of our alumni have remained friends and colleagues over the
decades, and during the Center
for Silicon System Implementation
(CSSI) alumni and friends reception at the San Diego Marriott Hotel & Marina
on June 5, guests enjoyed catching
up with old friends. Our Semiconductor
Research Corporation (SRC) liaisons are also invited to the gathering. |
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| June 2007 |
Startup weaves 'fabric' for IC design
Two companies spun-off from ECE
research, Fabbrix
Inc. and
PDF Solutions Inc.,
are collaborating on a project
to refine circuit technology,
aiming to substantially exceed
silicon performance at 65 nanometers
and below. Fabbrix was founded
by Larry
Pillegi, Tanoto Professor of ECE; Director, CSSI. Andrzej
Strojwas,
Keithley Professor of ECE, co-founded
PDF Solutions. |
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