SANTA
CLARA, Calif. - April 8, 2003 - When TelASIC Communications,
founded to deliver high-performance and cost-effective silicon
to the wireless marketplace, started searching for an extraction
tool the design team had two major requirements: the ability
to extract inductance parasitics, and a more automated approach
to the extraction process.
The company's design flow is based on
Cadence's Analog Artist and Spectre RF simulator. What was
missing was an extraction technology that could handle resistance,
capacitance, and inductance, all the while being coordinated
with the IBM SiGe design kits. According to TelASIC CTO, Don
Devendorf, it is essential to have RLC extraction when working
with SiGe because of the high speeds achieved.
After careful evaluation, Devendorf settled
on Sequence Design's Columbus-RF, the only tool that met all
of the company's requirements.
Before adopting Columbus-RF, parasitics
at TelASIC were painstakingly extracted by hand according
to Devendorf. "Designers had to focus on identifying
the most sensitive nodes and had to calculate around those
nodes. It took a lot of time and was error prone.
"There was no commercial tool capable
of dealing with inductance until Sequence came along,"
Devendorf said. "Columbus-RF been very helpful, providing
an excellent correlation to aberrant behavior, and it's allowed
us to work on problems we would have been in the dark on in
the past . . . we're delighted to have it."
"A highly skilled group like this
runs into some pretty thorny design issues," said Will
Ruby, Sequence director of product marketing. "The fact
that TelASIC has chosen Columbus-RF points out just how much
value we, and our customers, place on these tools."
For more information on how TelASIC employed
Sequence's Columbus-RF to tackle its inductance challenge,
visit:
About TelASIC Communications
TelASIC Communications develops high
performance, cost-effective RF and analog mixed signal solutions
for advanced wireless applications for both the defense electronics
and commercial markets. The company's technical team developed
this technology and expertise while part of the Advanced Products
group within Raytheon Company's Electronic Systems business.
The company has offices in El Segundo and Westlake Village,
California, and a regional office in the United Kingdom.
About Sequence
Sequence Design, Inc., the SoC Design
Closure CompanySM, enables system-on-chip designers to bring
higher-performance and lower-power integrated circuits quickly
to fabrication. Sequence's power and signal integrity software
give its more than 100 customers the competitive advantage
they need to excel in aggressive technology markets, despite
demanding complexity and time-to-market issues of nanometer
design.
Sequence has worldwide development and
field service operations. The company was recently named by
Reed Electronics as one of the top 50 companies to watch in
the electronics industry. Sequence is privately held. Sequence
is a member of Cadence Design Systems' ConnectionsTM
and Mentor Graphics' Open DoorTM partnership programs.
Additional information is available at
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