What a cool renovation of an otherwise very utilitarian cramped dorm room!
The article mentioned that he was being questioned by campus facilities.
Let's hope Cal has the good sense to encourage such exceptional creativity and engineering.
Go Bears!
Thursday, May 03, 2012
Ridiculous Automation
Thursday, April 05, 2012
Qualcomm Co-Founder on Life & Keys to Success
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Graphene, Your Next Switch?

Friday, January 20, 2012
The Evolution of Conference Schwag
I noticed a lonely unused USB drive in my desk today, and it got me thinking about the hoops that we engineers will jump through to get a conference giveaway. It's an arms race!
I just took a box full of bags and backpacks to the donation station ...
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Note, none of the pictures are of my schwag. I grabbed photos available under Creative Commons license.
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Synopsys/ Magma - Gary Smith's take
This point is hard to argue with:
The static timing analyzer will be a big issue with the customer base. With their recent acquisition of Extreme DA, and now Magma, Synopsys has regained their Franchise position in the important Static Timing market. This is not a good thing for the design engineer. Only competition drives tool improvements.
But how's this for bravado?
Magma brags that they can achieve better results with a five man team than Synopsys can with a fifty man team.That's the sort of claim I might believe from an EDA startup; could a public company (no longer a spring chicken) be so agile, or is this coming from the supreme confidence of their CEO?
Tuesday, January 03, 2012
The Engadget Interview: ARM co-founder John Biggs

Friday, December 02, 2011
Unix's Long Strange Trip

Such a wisely designed system to be pervasive after 40 years!
Saturday, November 19, 2011
Thursday, November 10, 2011
3D ICs Have a History
Practical takeaway: stacked memory is clearly one of the killer apps for 21st-century 3D IC assembly.
Thursday, November 03, 2011
SNUG Silicon Valley 2012 CFP

If you're a Synopsys tool user, please consider submitting a paper today for presentation at SNUG Silicon Valley. You can propose a paper by filling out a form and writing an abstract. Besides benefiting the engineering community at large, you'll develop your professional skills and raise your profile. We on the Tech Committee will help you!
Please visit the Call for Papers Web Page to check it out and submit your idea.
Wednesday, November 02, 2011
Career Fodder
I'm thinking to write a post on immigration and careers, but for now let me point you to two provocative articles I recently read:
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Steve Jobs's Advice for Obama. While I love the acronym: the Staple Act (Stopping Trained in America Ph.D.s from Leaving the Economy), the article also claims that Steve Jobs told Mr. Obama that Apple employs 700,000 factory workers in China because it can't find the 30,000 engineers in the U.S. that it needs on site at its plants. "If you could educate these engineers," he said at the dinner, "we could move more manufacturing jobs here." Quite a claim!
- Non-engineer-staffed IEEE-USA sells out US electrical engineering jobs, a forum post on SemiWiki.com, sparks an excellent debate about US engineering grad schools, H1B and "green cards", and career prospects for American engineers (and their children).
Friday, September 16, 2011
Dilbert Channels Apple
How does it apply to our world?
"As it turns out, you can't get your data out of our EDA tool ..."
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Twitter Primer

If you've heard about Twitter but don't know what it's all about, here's their article to succinctly show you the answers: The Listening Post » Twitter Helps Engineers.
What tweets might you find related to EDA on Twitter? Here's a real-time display:
Tuesday, September 06, 2011
Architecting for Asynchronous Designs
Friday, September 02, 2011
Steve Jobs' Partner in Design

The SF Chronicle has a nice profile of one of the less publicized but vitally important talents at Apple, the head of product design: Apple's product vision falls to Jonathan Ive.
Update: Perhaps the San Jose Mercury News follows my blog, because shortly after this post, the newspaper of Silicon Valley came out with their own profile of Mr. Ive, Apple's design wizard has not left the building - San Jose Mercury News.
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Steve Jobs’s Best Quotes
Thursday, July 28, 2011
CAD Engineers' Bookshelf Updated
Four years ago, I presented my original CAD Engineers' Bookshelf. I've put together an updated list here of the subset of books that I refer to most often. Since some titles have been updated, latest editions are listed here.
Another update since 2007 is that alternative formats are widely available for these books. You can go directly to the source at O'Reilly Media and purchase Ebooks formatted for all the popular e-readers. It's very convenient to be able to download formats that look great on your Computer, Kindle, or iPad.
Without further ado, here's the 2011 version of the bookshelf.
It's all Perl, which is testimony to both Perl's power and it's inscrutability!
Monday, July 25, 2011
When Trolls Attack
Ever listen to This American Life? Ira Glass is a great story teller. This week's episode is very relevant to our industry.
It's on the long side. You can listen to it here, or do as I do and load it as a podcast onto your personal media player of choice. Then you can listen while washing the dishes, walking the dog, etc. Multi-tasking!
Who's your (least) favorite EDA/IP patent troll?
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Art of Failure 2011
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Saluting the Father of our Foundry
The article quotes numerous industry luminaries to frame his impact. It's hard to overstate what Dr. Chang's accomplishments have done for so many of the industries that we work in: fabless semiconductor, EDA, ASIC, ... I found the article to be full of fascinating tidbits, such as
- His first job paid $480 per month.
- At the beginning, he was a self-taught semiconductor engineer. He spent countless hours after work to learn about new fields.
- He was a highly successful TI executive before "starting over" to create a new industry from scratch in Taiwan.
- On several occasions, he left good companies when things weren't working out, with no immediate job prospects. He had the confidence that he'd find a good opportunity.
- Dr. Chang didn't become fabulously wealthy from founding TSMC! He's well-off, for sure, but a US executive would have made sure to ensure his success first.