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Friday, September 26, 2008
| Presenter: | Arvind |
|---|---|
| Affiliation: | Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory M.I.T. |
| Time: | 13:30 - 14:30 |
| Location: | 101 Walter Library |
In the developing world, a mobile phone is the only computer most people have. With countries like India getting seven million new mobile phone customers per month, mobile devices and the associated services infrastructure are going to be the main drivers for both industry and research. In this new world, power and cost constraints completely determine functionality. Meeting power and cost constraints for mobile devices and sensors is much easier through dedicated chips than via software programmability. This vision is counter to the steadily decreasing new chip-starts in industry driven by rising chip development costs. A fundamental shift is needed in the current design flow of systems-on-a-chip (SoCs) to fulfill this demand in a cost-efficient manner.
We will present a method of designing systems that facilitates synthesis of complex SoCs from reusable "IP" modules. The technical challenge is to provide a method for connecting modules in a parallel setting so that the functionality and the performance of the composite are predictable.
Arvind is the Johnson Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at MIT where in the late eighties his group, in collaboration with Motorola, built the Monsoon dataflow machines and its associated software. In 2000, Arvind started Sandburst which was sold to Broadcom in 2006. In 2003, Arvind co-founded Bluespec Inc., an EDA company to produce a set of tools for high-level synthesis. In 2001, Dr. R. S. Nikhil and Arvind published the book "Implicit parallel programming in pH". Arvind's current research focus is on enabling rapid development of embedded systems. Arvind also manages the CSAIL-Nokia collaboration and was inducted in the NAE recently.