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CLARA, Calif. - May 28, 2008 - Sequence Design's Tom Miller,
Vice President and Head of R&D, Front-End Products, is
one of the featured authors in a new book, "A Practical
Guide to Low-Power Design - User Experience with CPF,"
that has been released by the Power Forward Initiative (PFI).
The book can be downloaded free of charge at www.powerforward.org.
The Sequence chapter, "Early Power Analysis with CPF,"
details how the biggest power reductions can be achieved during
architectural tradeoffs and describes multiple techniques
for power analysis and optimization along with real-world
examples of these approaches in action.
"PFI has gathered an impressive list of expert contributors
for this book, and are once again demonstrating how the Common
Power Format (CPF) helps maintain design integrity throughout
the flow, while creating an environment to maximize power
savings in complex designs," Miller said.
For example, Sequence's PowerTheater can analyze designs using
multiple-supply voltages and power shutoff techniques to help
users make design tradeoffs at RTL resulting in more power-efficient
designs, and then generate an output CPF file that captures
the design intent originally specified as well as derived
design intent. This CPF file will be more complete based on
the automatic generation of level shifter, isolation and power
switch rules as well as a complete description of the power
modes that may need to be filled out, resulting in fewer errors
passed to downstream tools.
In addition to Sequence, contributors to the new book include
ARC, ARM, Faraday, Freescale, Fujitsu, NEC Electronics, NXP,
and TSMC. PFI will be showcasing the new book in Si2's DAC
Booth 1614.
About Power Forward Initiative
The Power Forward Initiative, which has more than 25 member
companies, is an industry initiative sponsored by Cadence
that was formed in May 2006. It has the goal of enabling the
design and production of more power-efficient electronic devices.
The initiative includes companies representing a broad cross
section of the design chain including system, semiconductor,
foundry, IP, EDA, ASIC and design services companies. CPF
was contributed by Cadence to the Si2 Low Power Coalition
in December 2006 and CPF 1.0 is now available as an Si2 standard
to the industry at large. The Initiative has recently published
"A Practical Guide to Low-Power Design - User Experience
with CPF" which is aimed at educating the broad design
marketplace in utilizing advanced low-power design techniques.
The Guide is available free of charge at www.powerforward.org.
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