| [May 04, 2012] |
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49th Design Automation Conference Announces Keynote Speakers
LOUISVILLE, Colo. --(Business Wire)--
Industry luminaries from ARM, Inc., IBM (News - Alert) Corp., Intel Corp. and the
National Tsing Hua University will give the three keynote addresses at
the 49th Design Automation Conference (DAC),
the premier conference devoted to design and design automation of
electronic systems. DAC 2012 will be held at the Moscone Center in San
Francisco, California, from June 3-7, 2012.
"In assembling the 49th DAC series of distinguished keynotes speakers, I
am excited to announce that DAC is covering all bases, providing
refreshing viewpoints for systems designers, IC designers and EDA
software professionals," said Patrick Groeneveld, General Chair of the 49th
DAC. "Tuesday kicks off with ARM's Mike Muller, who will share his
vision for a future of embedded computing systems. Given that ARM's
processors power most smartphones, this will show the way for computing
in the future. On Wednesday, Joshua Friedrich and Brad Heaney will
outline the design practices for high-performance microprocessors. This
unique dual-keynote provides a look in the kitchen of leading
microprocessor companies designing the world's most advanced chips,"
Patrick enthusiastically continued. "Finally, the Thursday keynote by
Kaufman Award winner Dave Liu addresses the algorithmic revolution
behind EDA. Prof. Liu's contributions and insights have enabled the
remarkable design automation revolution that actually powers today's
trillion-transistor devices."
Keynote Schedule:
All keynotes will be held in rooms 102/103.
Tuesday, June 5, 2012 from 8:30am to 9:30am
Comparing the original ARM design of 1985 to those of today's latest
microprocessors, Mike will look at how far has design come and what EDA
has contributed to enabling these advances in systems, hardware,
operating systems, and applications as well as how business models have
evolved over 25 years. He will then speculate on the needs for scaling
designs into solutions for 2020 from tiny embedded sensors through to
cloud-based servers that together enable the "Internet of things." Mike
will look at the major challenges that need to be addressed to design
and manufacture these systems and propose some solutions.
Wednesday, June 6, 2012 from 10:45am to 11:45am
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Designing
High Performance Sytems-on-Chip
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Joint presentation by:
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Joshua Friedrich, Senior Technical Staff Member and Senior Manager
of POWERTM Technology Development in IBM's Server and
Technology Group.
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Brad Heaney, Intel Architecture Group Project Manager, Intel
Corp., Folsom, CA (News - Alert).
Experience state-of-the art design through the eyes of these two
experts. Joshua Friedrich will talk about POWER processor design and
methodology directions and Brad Heaney will discuss designing the latest
Intel (News - Alert) architecture multi-CPU and GPU. In this unique dual-keynote, the
speakers will cover key challenges, engineering decisions and design
methodologies to achieve top performance and turn-around time. The
presentations describe where EDA meets practice under the most advanced
nodes.
Thursday, June 7, 2012 from 11:00am to 12:00pm
Dave tells us: "It was June 1982 that I had my first technical paper in
the EDA area presented at the 19th Design Automation Conference. It was
exactly 20 years after I completed my doctoral study and exactly 30
years ago from today. I would like to share with the audience how my
prior educational experience prepared me to enter the EDA field and how
my EDA experience prepared me for the other aspects of my professional
life."
About the Speakers
Mike Muller
Mike Muller was one of the founders of ARM, which provides the embedded
processor in nearly every mobile device. Before joining the company, he
was responsible for hardware strategy and the development of portable
products at Acorn Computers and was part of the original ARM design
team. He was previously at Orbis Computers , which developed network
computers. At ARM, he was VP Marketing from 1992 to 1996 and EVP,
Business Development until October 2000, when he was appointed Chief
Technology Officer. In October 2001, he was appointed to the board of
ARM Holdings plc.
Joshua Friedrich
Joshua Friedrich is a Senior Technical Staff Member and Senior Manager
of POWERTM Technology Development in IBM's Server and
Technology Group. In his role, Josh leads the physical design,
technology direction, and methodology of IBM's future POWERTM
processors. Josh has been part of the POWER development team since POWER4TM.
In addition to POWERTM designs, Josh has led multiple design
disciplines, including power estimation and reduction, hardware
characterization, memory subsystem circuit development, and core
execution units. Before joining IBM, Josh received his Bachelor of
Science in Electrical Engineering from the University of Texas at Austin.
Brad Heaney
Brad Heaney is an Intel Architecture Group Project Manager and operates
out of Intel's Folsom Design Center. Brad is a 25-year veteran at Intel
and started his career working on the design of the 80386 family of
CPUs. He is the holder of four patents for his design work. In the last
few years, Brad has been managing the teams that deliver Intel's lead
vehicles for ramping new process technologies. Brad's team developed the
Penryn CPU, which was a lead vehicle for 45nm process technology. In
April of this year, they launched the Ivybridge CPU (3rd-generation
Intel Core Processor (News - Alert)), which is the lead vehicle for Intel's 22nm
process technology. Brad received his Bachelor of Science degree from
Drexel University in Philadelphia and his Master of Science in
Electrical Engineering degree from Stanford University prior to joining
Intel.
C. L. (David) Liu
C. L. Liu received his B.Sc. degree (1956) from the National Cheng Kung
University in Taiwan, and his S.M. (1960) and Sc.D. (1962) degrees from
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He taught at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, and the National Tsing Hua University in Taiwan. He
also served as the President of the National Tsing Hua University from
1998 to 2002.
C. L. is currently the William Mong Honorary Chair Professor of Computer
Science at the National Tsing Hua University, an industrial consultant,
and the host of a weekly radio show (since 2005). He has published over
180 technical papers; eight technical textbooks and research monographs
in the area of EDA, computer-aided instruction, real-time systems,
combinatorial optimization, and discrete mathematics; and seven essay
collections in the area of science and humanities.
About DAC
The Design Automation Conference (DAC) is recognized as the premier
event for the design of electronic circuits and systems, and for
electronic design automation (EDA) and silicon solutions. A diverse
worldwide community representing more than 1,000 organizations attends
each year, represented by system designers and architects, logic and
circuit designers, validation engineers, CAD managers, senior managers
and executives to researchers and academicians from leading
universities. No less than 60 technical sessions selected by a committee
of electronic design experts offer information on recent developments
and trends, management practices and new products, methodologies and
technologies. A highlight of DAC is its exhibition and suite area with
over 200 of the leading and emerging EDA, silicon, intellectual property
(IP) and design services providers. The conference is sponsored by the
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), the Electronic Design
Automation Consortium (EDA Consortium), and the Institute of Electrical
and Electronics Engineers (IEEE (News - Alert)), and is supported by ACM's Special
Interest Group on Design
Design Automation Conference acknowledges trademarks or registered
trademarks of other organizations for their respective products and
services.

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