SANTA CLARA,
Calif. - Nov. 6, 2006 - Sequence Design, the EDA leader in
power-aware SoC design solutions, today announced it has extended
its technology lead by adding the 22nd patent to the company's
design-technology portfolio. U.S. Patent No. 7,117,457 has
been granted to Jerry Frenkil, Sequence's general manager,
Silicon Business Unit, CTO and VP of R&D, and describes
a new "current scheduling system and method for optimizing
MTCMOS (Multi-Threshold CMOS) designs."
"This one-of-a-kind technology
becomes more significant for each process advance as standby-leakage
power threatens to increase exponentially in the years ahead,"
Frenkil said. "It is the first fully automatic method
for optimizing MTCMOS designs for worst-case current flow
and voltage drop."
Frenkil currently holds six of Sequence's 22 U.S. patents,
and the company has four additional low-power-design patents
pending approval.
"Our ongoing commitment to R&D continues to bear
fruit with breakthrough advances such as this new patented
technology," said Vic Kulkarni, Sequence president and
CEO. "Leakage power is a paramount concern with our customers
as they move to 65nm, and this new approach will be a key
tool in overcoming this growing challenge."
About Sequence
Sequence Design accelerates the ability of SoC designers
to bring high-performance, power-aware ICs quickly to market.
Sequence's power and signal- integrity software solutions
give customers the competitive advantage necessary to excel
in aggressive technology markets, despite the demanding complexity
and time-to-market issues of nanometer design. Sequence serves
over 150 customers worldwide, in application segments such
as consumer, wireless, mobile computing, multimedia, cell
phones, digital cameras, network-on-chip processors, and other
power-sensitive markets. The company was named by Reed Electronics
as one of the top 10 companies to watch in the electronics
industry, and was recently selected as one of high-tech's
Top 100 companies by siliconindia magazine. Sequence has worldwide
development and field-service operations and is privately
held. Please see . |