Session Chair:
G De Micheli, EPF Lausanne, CH
| 0830 |
OPENING REMARKS AND AWARDS Presentation of Distinguished Awards by Z Peng, Linkoping U, SE Welcoming addresses by: Dirk Hilbert, Deputy Mayor, Head of Department of Economic Affairs, Dresden Hansjoerg Koenig, State Secretary, Saxon State Ministry for Higher Education, Research and the Fine Arts |
KEYNOTE ADDRESSES
0910 ALL THINGS ARE CONNECTED
Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli, UC Berkeley and Cadence, US
Abstract: Design of complex system is essentially about connections: Connection of concepts, Connection of objects, Connection of teams. And products of the future will be connected seamlessly across physical and virtual domains. Connections can produce systems that offer more than the sum of the components but they can also yield to systems that are less powerful than the sum of the components or that are so compromised by their interactions that they do not work at all.
Collaboration is the name of the game for design, for production, for operation of multi-scale systems.
There is increasingly less distance between design and operation of systems. An efficient management of interactions among deployed parts of a larger system requires principles that are common to the design methods developed at the bleeding edge of technology. I will examine the evolution of design principles and of multiscale systems and the challenges we are facing today. I will point to a number of exciting fields where advances are constantly made towards the mastering of connections.
0950 WIRELESS COMMUNICATION – SUCCESSFUL DIFFERENTIATION ON STANDARD TECHNOLOGY BY INNOVATION
Herman Eul, VP, Infineon and University of Hannover, DE
Abstract: The rise of the wireless internet is the megatrend in communication industry. Mobile communication devices will be the dominant platform for information access, gaming, music and spending time with distant friends. About 5 bn or three quarters of the world population is using mobile phones. Internet enabled mobile phones at affordable cost will be the most common internet access device in the near future. At the high end powerful and versatile smartphones need faster and more energy efficient semiconductors.
The presentation will start with a brief summary of the paradigm shifts in the “mobile world” from voice calls to data transmission and the current situation in the renascent mobile ecosystem. The entry of powerful internet and consumer brands and now even luxury designer brands into the mobile handset arena mark the start of a new era changing the dynamics in this field.
Today, fabless or fab-lite business models are common in the wireless semiconductor value chain. In this model vendors differentiate through services, architectures, design but also their capability to extract maximum product benefits in density, power consumption, performance, functionality and robustness/yield from a standard CMOS process. In the highly competitive mobile phone market growth and profit depends on differentiation by innovation. This requires technology know-how being effectively transferred into the design system and application specific device structures to create optimised circuits.