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 EDACafe Editorial

Archive for November, 2024

Nvidia-powered CAE acceleration; new Keysight EDA software; CoWoS roadmap; new datacenter inference solution

Wednesday, November 20th, 2024

Artificial intelligence is the common underlying theme in most of the news this week. But first, some CHIPS Act updates.

Biden-Harris administration to finalize some subsidies

Some of the last moves from the Biden-Harris administration include finalizing part of the planned subsidies to support the U.S. semiconductor industry. TSMC Arizona has been awarded up to $6.6 billion to support the company’s planned investment of more than $65 billion in three greenfield leading-edge fabs in Phoenix, Arizona. GlobalFoundries has been awarded up to $1.5 billion to support the expansion of its existing fab in Malta, New York, the upgrading of its existing fab in Essex Junction, Vermont, and the construction of a new fab in Malta, New York. In addition to that, Akash Systems (Oakland, CA) has signed a non-binding preliminary memorandum of terms with the U.S. Department of Commerce under the CHIPS and Science Act to receive over $68 million in direct funding to support the operational ramp-up of its Diamond Cooling semiconductor technologies.

Nvidia accelerates CAE digital twins

Nvidia has announced an Omniverse Blueprint that enables industry software developers to help their CAE customers create digital twins with real-time interactivity. Software developers such as Altair, Ansys, Cadence and Siemens can use the Nvidia Omniverse Blueprint, a reference workflow that includes Nvidia acceleration libraries, physics-AI frameworks and interactive physically based rendering to achieve – according to the company – 1,200x faster simulations and real-time visualization. One of the first applications of the blueprint is computational fluid dynamics simulations. Ansys ran Fluent at the Texas Advanced Computing Center on 320 Nvidia GH200 Grace Hopper Superchips. A 2.5-billion-cell automotive simulation was completed in just over six hours, which would have taken nearly a month running on 2,048 x86 CPU cores.

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Shifting left software development; advancements in car power architectures; Japan’s semiconductor subsidies; ADI acquires Flex Logix

Wednesday, November 13th, 2024

Let’s start with a quick geopolitical update: Vietnam is emerging as a destination for new semiconductor-related investments. According to press reports, Foxconn intends to step up its presence in the country to produce integrated circuits, and multiple players – both foreign and domestic companies – are expanding capacity in Vietnam for chip testing and packaging.

EDA updates

Siemens Digital Industries Software has added the Innexis product suite to its Veloce hardware-assisted verification and validation system, to address demand for shift-left software development in the design process of complex SoCs. Currently, the Innexis product suite consists of: Innexis Developer Pro, which provides a connected development flow from virtual to hybrid to full RTL; Innexis Architecture Native Acceleration, a cloud-based high-speed virtual platform; Innexis Virtual System Interconnect, to facilitate the creation and simulation of comprehensive system level digital twin platforms by connecting multi-behavioral virtual and physical subsystems.

Altair PollEx for ECAD, a PCB verification tool, is now available as a one-year free trial. The tool enables engineers – early in the design cycle – to review designs, analyze, verify, and assess physical, logical, and electrical attributes, and detect potential manufacturing and electrical issues. It can also boost production yield with ECAD integration, and ensure collaboration throughout the PCB development process. Altair PollEx for ECAD integrates with major PCB design tools like the ones from Altium, Cadence, Siemens, and Zuken.

CelusAI-driven automation has been integrated with Siemens’ PCB design solutions, enabling a workflow that automates routine design tasks like schematic generation. This cooperation aims at enhancing accessibility and efficiency in PCB design for small to medium-sized businesses and independent engineers.

Excellicon has re-engineered its core timing graph engine to address the performance requirements of timing constraints generation and verification in complex SoC designs, characterized by a surge in gate count and the proliferation of clock domains. According to the company, its newly developed Hyper-Graph technology delivers a 3X-5X run time speed improvement over the nearest competitor.

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Siemens-Altair deal; rumored OpenAI-Broadcom chip; 0.017 nm precision in chip stacking; transistors operating at 0.3 volts; Intel backstories

Wednesday, November 6th, 2024

Will Donald Trump’s victory have an impact on the semiconductor industry? Should the industry expect changes to the CHIPS for America program and/or a different approach in the so-called “chip war” with China and related geopolitical issues? As the world waits for more insights, let’s briefly report some recent updates on both fronts. As for the CHIPS for America program, locations have been selected for the “Extreme Ultraviolet Accelerator”, which will operate within NY Creates’ NanoTech Complex in Albany, New York, supported by an investment of $825 million; and for the “Design and Collaboration Facility”, which will be based in Sunnyvale, California. As for geopolitical tensions, SpaceX has reportedly asked Taiwanese suppliers to transfer manufacturing off the island, because of geopolitical risks; and the British government has reportedly ordered China-registered Future Technology Devices International Holding Ltd to sell 80.2% of Scotland-based chip company FTDI over national security risks.

Siemens-Altair deal

A few days after the acquisition announcement, let’s take a closer look at the Siemens-Altair deal. The announcement press release from Siemens offers a glimpse into how the combined product offering will look like. Altair’s simulation portfolio, with strength in mechanical and electromagnetic capabilities, will enhance Siemens’s Digital Twin to deliver a full-suite, physics-based, simulation portfolio as part of Siemens Xcelerator (which is Siemens’s development platform to help companies become digital enterprises). Altair’s data science and AI-powered simulation capabilities will be leveraged to allow anyone, from engineers to generalists, to access simulation expertise. And Altair’s data science capabilities will boost Siemens’s expertise in product lifecycle and manufacturing processes. Clearly, from a technology point of view, the Siemens-Altair deal is not just about EDA, as both companies offer many software tools targeted at industries other than semiconductors. Altair, for example, also offers HPC & Cloud tools, AEC (architecture, engineering, and construction) solutions, data analytics and more. However, taking EDA only into account, one could see this deal as a way to boost the former Mentor Graphics offering with the addition of Altair’s multiphysics simulation capabilities. From this point of view, the Siemens-Altair deal can be likened to the Synopsys acquisition of Ansys. Also, the Siemens-Altair deal confirms the EDA concentration trend, with the “big three” getting ever bigger.

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