The open source instruction set architecture known as RISC-V has gained significant momentum over the past year. To be sure, the ISA is now backed by a number of industry heavyweights, including Google, LG and BAE Systems.
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New monetization opportunities for the IoT
Steven Woo, VP of Solutions Marketing at Rambus, recently participated in an Internet of Things (IoT) Summit panel discussion about the creation of new monetization opportunities in the burgeoning space. As Woo noted, chip design projects that once cost a few tens of millions of dollars a decade ago have jumped to $200 million or more. In addition, a significant increase in the number of IP blocks, use cases and configurations have created complex schedule risks and logistics challenges for chipmakers.
Semiconductor (silicon) IP market to hit $7 billion by 2022
A new report by MarketsandMarkets projects that the semiconductor (silicon) IP space will be worth $7.01 billion in 2022, up from $3.09 billion in 2015. “The driving factors for the growth of this market include increasing demand for advanced SoCs in the consumer sector, increased funding from governments and investors, emerging IoT ecosystem, recovering automotive sector and growing popularity of miniaturized devices,” MarketsandMarkets researchers explained in a recently published report summary.
From Silicon Valley to Egypt National Science Week
The Egypt National Science Week is a nationwide celebration to promote science and technology throughout the country, comprising numerous lectures, panel discussions, science demonstrations, robot competitions, cultural events and more, held at universities in major cities all over Egypt. More than 12,000 people, mostly students, registered to participate and over 1500 attended the opening events on March 12 at the Week’s hub, the American University in Cairo.
Rambus inks security license agreement with Altis Semiconductor
Rambus’ Cryptography Research division has signed a licensing agreement with Altis Semiconductor for the use of advanced security technologies. The agreement includes differential power analysis (DPA) countermeasure techniques, which are designed to protect against DPA and other side-channel attacks.
Going beyond DRAM with Smart Data Acceleration
Ed Sperling of Semiconductor Engineering recently noted that new memory types and approaches are being developed as Moore’s Law begins to slow. “What fits where in the memory hierarchy is becoming less clear as the semiconductor industry grapples with these changes,” he explained. “New architectures, such as fan-outs and 2.5D, raise questions about how many levels of cache need to be on-die, and whether high-speed connections and shorter distances can provide equal or better performance off-chip.”