Services Supplier Takes On Physical Design Through Manufacturing

April 26, 2004
Companies opting to develop an ASIC often possess expertise in the architecture and logic-design portions of the project. But unless a team of physical-design experts is hired, the design team would welcome the opportunity to transfer the...

Companies opting to develop an ASIC often possess expertise in the architecture and logic-design portions of the project. But unless a team of physical-design experts is hired, the design team would welcome the opportunity to transfer the implementation responsibility to a team of experts.

Such a team now exists at Open Silicon, a design services company that accepts designs at the RTL/netlist or GDS II level, performs all of the physical design, and co-manages the design through manufacturing. To do this, Open Silicon defined a methodology to evaluate designs to determine if they fall within the company's criteria to take on the project. It then formed a group of key partners along the way so customers can select among different foundries, intellectual-property resources, packaging suppliers, and test vendors while having complete visibility over the project schedules.

In Open Silicon's cost-plus-margin approach, a very disciplined methodology creates the design, delivering results that meet specifications the first time through the process. Ultimately, it minimizes the nonrecurring engineering costs and reduces time-to-market.

Open Silicon www.opensilicon.com
About the Author

Dave Bursky | Technologist

Dave Bursky, the founder of New Ideas in Communications, a publication website featuring the blog column Chipnastics – the Art and Science of Chip Design. He is also president of PRN Engineering, a technical writing and market consulting company. Prior to these organizations, he spent about a dozen years as a contributing editor to Chip Design magazine. Concurrent with Chip Design, he was also the technical editorial manager at Maxim Integrated Products, and prior to Maxim, Dave spent over 35 years working as an engineer for the U.S. Army Electronics Command and an editor with Electronic Design Magazine.

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