Analysis

ChipX XPath Methodology Enables Seamless Migration from Structured ASIC to Standard Cell

22nd August 2007
ES Admin
0
ChipX Inc. today announced a new methodology that enables customers to launch their products quickly with a Structured ASIC and then seamlessly migrate their design to a Standard Cell device once the product features and market potential have been validated. The methodology, called XPath, enables customers to get products to market quickly and inexpensively and will play a valued role in the production of ASICs for a wide variety of applications, including consumer electronics and embedded products.
“For many ASIC users, this approach’s total time to market advantage can be the difference between becoming a market leader or being just another competitor,” said Elie Massabki, vice president of marketing with ChipX. “Using XPath, customers can save up to seven months of development time, virtually eliminating market and development risks from their program.”



Schedule and Cost Benefits

With pre-validated and pre-built mixed signal IP cores integrated with ChipX’s Structured ASIC configurable logic, memory, I/Os and other IP, customers can get their product to market quickly and inexpensively. Customers pay a fraction of the Standard Cell NRE and they have the opportunity to modify their product quickly to adjust to initial customer requirements and market demand.



Once the product is ready for high-volume production, ChipX will seamlessly migrate the design to Standard Cell using the same proven IP components and logic. Product availability is not affected, and customers receive a rebate of 75 percent of the Structured ASIC NRE toward the Standard Cell NRE price.



With the Structured ASIC approach, customers will typically save two to three months from design handoff to prototypes, compared with a Standard Cell ASIC design. The exact savings in time are dependent on the size and complexity of a given design. Volume production ramp can also start a month earlier with a Structured ASIC. A simple feature change in the product will typically impact a Standard Cell ASIC schedule by a minimum of six months. A Structured ASIC re-spin can be done in half that period. Overall, customers can save six to seven months by starting with a Structured ASIC.





ChipX’s expertise with Structured and Standard Cell ASICs positions the company to uniquely deliver the XPath methodology to designers. ChipX has shipped six generations of Structured ASICs to the marketplace and taped out complex Standard Cells ASICs with up to 10 million gates and 550MHz performance, along with integrated high-speed mixed signal interfaces.

Product Spotlight

Upcoming Events

View all events
Newsletter
Latest global electronics news
© Copyright 2024 Electronic Specifier