DISCUSSION
SESSIONS
Mon.,
7
8:00
PM
ME1 When
Can I Buy a Dick Tracy Watch for Christmas?
(Salon
7)
Organizer:
Phillip Wong,
IBM
T. J. Watson Research Ctr, Yorktown Heights, NY
Moderator:
Woodward Yang,
Harvard University, Cambridge, MA
Developments
in low power chips and mobile communications seem to put the ultimate
communications device, the "Dick Tracy Watch," within grasp of the mass market.
Is the basic technology now available to make this device a reality? Are we
headed toward wearable computing and personal communications devices combining
wristwatch, cell phone, digital camera, GPS and PDA? Questions about power
consumption, battery life, physical form factor, communication range, critical
features and applications must be addressed to make such devices successful in
the mass market.
Panelists:
Steve
Mann,
University
of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Wai
Lee,
Texas Instruments, Dallas, TX
Eric
Vittoz,
CSEM Centre Suisse d'Electronique et de Microtechnique SA,
Neuchâtel,
Switzerland
Rein
de Graaf,
Philips
Research, Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Sven
Mattison,
Ericsson Mobile Communications AB, Lund, Sweden
Yuji
Kitamura,
Sanyo Semiconductors, Rochelle Park, NJ
ME2 Where
Will Processor Performance Come From in the
Next
Ten Years?
(Salon
8)
Co-organizer/Moderator:
Krste Asanovic,
Mass.
Inst. of Technology,
Cambridge,
MA
Co-organizer:
William Bowhill,
Compaq Computer Corp., Shrewsbury, MA
Following
Moore's law, microprocessor performance increased by about two orders of
magnitude from 1990 to 2000. How can another factor of 100 be obtained over
the next ten years? How much improvement can be expected from process
technology, circuit design, computer architecture, and compiler technology?
What technical hurdles must be overcome to achieve this goal? How will future
designs cope with trends in interconnect delay, power dissipation, design
effort, memory speed, and compiler complexity?
Panelists:
William
Dally,
Stanford University, Stanford, CA
Joel
Emer,
Compaq Computer Corp., Shrewsbury, MA
Frank
Fox,
Rambus Inc., Mountain View, CA
Wen-Mei
Hwu,
Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL
Hiroshi
Iwai,
Tokyo Institute of Technology, Midori-ku, Yokohama, Japan
Fred
Pollack,
Intel Corp., Santa Clara, CA
Fred
Weber,
AMD,
Sunnyvale, CA
ME3 Engineering
Resources: Train, Buy, or Steal?
(Salon
9)
Organizer:
Todd Brooks,
Broadcom Corp., Irvine, CA
Moderator:
David Robertson,
Analog
Devices, Wilmington, MA
Engineering
talent is in scarce supply in the industry today. Competition for people can be
every bit as intense as the competition for technology leadership or market
share. A variety of strategies for attracting and retaining this expertise is
available. Each strategy has issues: How to train junior engineers? How to
smoothly integrate employees following a merger or acquisition? How to make use
of consultants and design services companies? Where to find experienced
engineers? How to entice them to leave their present positions? How to hold on
to talent? Collectively, the panelists bring decades of experience to the table
on different approaches to solving this important problem.
Panelists:
Theo
Claasen,
Philips Semiconductors, Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Nicky
Lu,
Etron Technology Inc., Hsinchu, Taiwan, ROC
Mary
Jane Raymond,
Lucent Technologies, Murray Hill, NJ
Nav
Sooch,
Silicon Laboratories, Inc., Austin, TX
T.
R. Viswanathan,
Texas
Instruments, Dallas, TX
Bob
Wiederhold,
Cadence Design Systems, Inc., San Jose, CA
ME4 Memory
Designer: Survivor or Dinosaur?
(Salon
10-15)
Organizer/
Moderator:
Jagdish
Pathak, Sub Micron Circuits, Inc., San Jose, CA
Semiconductor
memories were stand-alone products for all these years. Memory designs were on
the leading edge of the technology and were ideal vehicles for technology
development. The memory designer has, thus far, enjoyed a challenging and
rewarding career environment, but the picture is now changing. The push for
system cn a chip (SOC), ASIC design methodologies of standard-cell libraries,
memory compilers, and generators are making the memory designer obsolete. The
discussion in this session will focus on the future role of the memory designer.
Panelists:
Jim
Kupec,
UMC Group, Sunnyvale, CA
Prakash
Bhalerao,
Amber
Networks, Cupertino, CA
Michael
G. Kliment,
Virtual Silicon Technology, Inc., Sunnyvale, CA
Robert
Proebsting,
Integrated Device Technology, Santa Clara, CA
Richard
Foss,
MOSAID
Technologies, Inc., Kanata, Ontario, Canada
Adam
Kablanian,
Virage
Logic Corporation, Fremont, CA
DISCUSSION
SESSIONS
Tues,
8
8:00
PM
TE5 Can
System LSI be a Technology Driver for the
Coming
Ten Years?
(Salon
7)
Co-organizer:
Hirotaka Tamura,
Fujitsu
Labs, Ltd., Nakahara,
Kawasaki,
Japan
Co-organizer:
Shigeo Kuninobu,
Matsushita Electric, Nagaoka,
Kyoto,
Japan
Moderator:
Takayasu Sakurai,
University of Tokyo, Minato, Tokyo, Japan
This
panel gives the attendee an idea of what should be the primary product and/or
service that drives the semiconductor technology during the next 10-year
period. These products will drive the manufacturing technology, giving
reasonable profit, so that the semiconductor industry can enjoy healthy growth.
The discussion addresses the technology and business issues that affect the
long-term prosperity of the industry.
Panelists:
Emmanuel
Crabbe,
IBM Semiconductor Research & Development Ctr,
Hopewell
Junction, NY
Herman
Casier,
Alcatel, Brussels, Belgium
Minoru
Yamamoto,
Fujitsu
Ltd., Nakahara, Kawasaki, Japan
Chuck
Dennison,
Micron Technology, Boise, ID
Tetsuya
Iizuka,
THine Electronics Inc., Tokyo, Japan
Tadahiko
Nakamura,
Sony Corp., Tokyo, Japan
TE6 RF
and High-Speed Interfaces: 50
Ohm
or Freedom?
Low
Voltage Differential or Custom?
(Salon
8)
Co-organizer/
Co-moderator: Jan Sevenhans,
Alcatel, Antwerp, Belgium
Co-organizer/
Co-moderator: Christer Svensson,
Link
öping
University,
Linköping,
Sweden
For
RF/Analog, is 50
Ohm
an optimum or an obstacle? Digital interfaces are wide-band. RF signals for
wireless are narrow-band with LC-tuning to cancel capacitive loads of package
pins and parasitics, allowing for higher Z. The natural Z of air for
commercial antennas is about 300
Ohm.
The optimum noise Z in Si, especially in CMOS is Vnoise-limited, so 50
Ohm
is low for an LNA. RF-filters also follow for 50
Ohm.
Is 300
Ohm
the low-cost RF-Z if we do some concurrent engineering for antenna, RF filters,
RFICs and measurement equipment? Digital high-speed interfaces move to new
standards, for low-power and low-supply voltage CMOS: PECL, LVDS etc. and
single-ended or balanced pinout. So, what will be the future?
Panelists:
Helmut
Preisach,
Alcatel SEL AG, Stuttgart, Germany
Shekhar
Borkar,
Intel Corporation, Hillsboro, OR
Michiel
Steyaert,
K.U.,
Leuven, Heverlee, Belgium
Yoshihiko
Ashida,
Murata Manufacturing Co. Ltd., Nagasaka, Japan
Herman
Boss,
Rhode
& Schwartz GmbH, Munich, Germany
Thaddeus
Gabara,
Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies, Murray Hill, NJ
TE7 Home
Networking: Wired or Wireless?
(Salon
9)
Co-organizer:
Lars Thon,
T-Span Systems, Corp., Palo Alto, CA
Co-organizer:
Wanda Gass,
Texas
Instruments, Dallas, TX
Moderator:
Victor Bahl
,
Microsoft Research, Redmond, WA
Residential
broadband internet and entertainment service is now realized with technologies
such as xDSL, cable modems and direct satellite transmission. The frontier is
distribution of multimedia content, from the entry to computers and information
appliances throughout the home. Most homes lack networking infrastructure, and
a multitude of consortia, companies and standard committees are developing
solutions. Should this networking technology be based on new cabling, existing
cabling, or wireless technologies such as RF and InfraRed? What technology will
prevail in home networking? What are the implications for the semiconductor
industry?
Panelists:
Ran
Yan,
Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies, Holmdel, NJ
Edward
H. Frank,
Epigram
Inc., Sunnyvale, CA
Alberto
Mantovani,
Conexant Systems Inc., Newport Beach, CA
Brent
Myers,
Intersil, Palm Bay, FL
Sven
Mattisson,
Ericsson Mobile Communications AB, Lund, Sweden
Neil
Weste,
Radiata Communications Pty Ltd., Epping, Australia
Modest
Oprysko,
IBM
Research Division, Yorktown Heights, NY
TE8 Nostradamus
II: Technology's Impact on the Next Millennium
(Salon
10-15)
Co-organizer
/ Co-moderator: Trudy Stetzler,
Texas
Instruments, Stafford, TX
Co-organizer
/ Co-moderator: Mary Jo Nettles,
AMCC, San Diego, CA
Nostradamus
predicted many of the events that marked the last thousand years. As the next
millennium begins, experts, pundits and prophets discuss some ideas about new
technical concepts and breakthroughs that they expect to occur in the third
millennium. The discussion includes man-machine integration, digital imaging,
artificial intelligence and the cost of technology.
Panelists:
W.
H. Korving,
Philips Semiconductors B.V., Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Earl
McCune,
Tropian Inc., Cupertino, CA
Gene
A. Frantz,
Texas Instruments, Stafford, TX
Jim
Ebentier,
AMCC, San Diego, CA
Shumpei
Kawasaki,
Hitachi,
Los Altos Hills, CA
Eric
Shutz,
Alcatel
Microelectronics, Zaventem, Belgium