VLSI Design

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Deep Blue VLSI chip [1] VLSI Design, (Very Large Scale Integration)

an integrated circuit design combining a very large number (typically several 100 thousands or millions) of MOS transistors onto a single chip [2]. Since the late 70s, until today, microprocessors and memory chips are VLSI chips. In 1978-1979, Caltech professor Carver Mead and scientist Lynn Conway [3] wrote the textbook Introduction to VLSI Systems and taught simple design rules suited for electronic design automation starting the VLSI revolution. In 1980, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency of the United States began the DoD’s new VLSI research project to support extensions of this work, which resulted in many university and industry researchers learning and improving the Mead-Conway innovations.

See also

Selected Publications

1979

1980 …

1990 …

References

  1. Deep blue chip, International Business Machines (IBM), 1997, Gift of Feng-hsiung Hsu, The Computer History Museum
  2. Very Large Scale Integration from Wikipedia
  3. Impact of the Mead-Conway innovations in VLSI chip design and implementation methodology - An overview by Lynn Conway, November 16, 2007
  4. 1983 | Waking up to change in Chris Redmond and Simon the Troll (1998). Water Under the Bridge. University of Waterloo
  5. Alexander Reinefeld (2005). Die Entwicklung der Spielprogrammierung: Von John von Neumann bis zu den hochparallelen Schachmaschinen. slides as pdf, Themen der Informatik im historischen Kontext Ringvorlesung an der HU Berlin, 02.06.2005 (English paper, German title)
  6. Systolic array from Wikipedia
  7. Any opinion about this book?: “All the Right Moves” by E Diaz, CCC, January 02, 2012

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