DFT Digest

May 30, 2008

Off the beaten (DAC) path

Filed under: Industry, News — John @ 9:51 pm

For most of the average joes attending the Design Automation Conference, it’s a time to walk the exhibit floor, witness demos of the latest EDA gear, take in some interesting technical sessions, and maybe attend a party or reception.

But if you dig around the DAC website, you’ll see a link to something called “Collocated Events“. I guess, as is the case with any large conference, the DAC event makes it convenient for other events to happen around the same time and place: various meetings, symposia, even full conferences.

The one link to a collocated event that caught my eye, being a Design for Test guy, is the Global STC Conference, presented by the Semiconductor Test Consortium, taking place just before DAC, June 4-6, in San Diego.

STC is probably most known for promoting the OPENSTAR intiative (open architecture for ATE). They also work on standards for docking interfaces and probe cards, all very test-floor centric activities, not normally the concern of designers. The agenda is dominated by those issues, but on June 5th, the second day of the conference, there are couple of sessions that piqued my interest: “Cooperation Between EDA and ATE: Now More Important Than Ever“, presented by Ed Malloy of Cadence, and “Design for Test - Small Price to Pay on Silicon for High Product Quality“, by Prasad Mantri of Sun.

Hey I have an idea! How about selling conference sessions a la carte? Or in mix-and-match packages (”go to any 10 technical sessions - any conference or symposium of your choice - for only $249!”). Naahh… probably too much travel. But it sounds better sometimes than purchasing a complete conference pass for the 2 or 3 really interesting sessions…

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4 Responses to “Off the beaten (DAC) path”

  1. James Colgan Says:

    ….or how about an Online Trade Show!? No traveling at all!

  2. John Says:

    Hi James:

    Thanks for reading DFT Digest - and I think your idea is great! And in these times of high energy prices, the idea is timely.

    I checked out your website (www.xuropa.com). I’ll be interested to see how things work out. I think it’d be great if engineers could present research papers in such a forum also. What do you think?

    JMF

  3. » Attend a conference on-line Says:

    [...] Just a couple of posts ago, I was pointing out that I’d like to be able to attend conference technical sessions in an a-la-carte fashion, since DFT is one of those disciplines that, with a few exceptions, is covered very lightly at many conferences.  Why pay full price for just a couple presentations? [...]

  4. James Colgan Says:

    Hello John, and thank you!

    The Paper Repository is a great idea. It’s in the development pipeline and I’ll let you know when it’s ready for prime-time.

    In the meantime, one means of “self expression” is Product Rating and Reviewing. A member registers a product and the company who provides it and then writes the review and gives it a rating.

    This is all part of Xuropa’s goal of bringing the community together and the sharing of ideas. Potential users want perspectives to understand what’s out there and vendors want to know how to improve their products in a meaningful way.

    We aim to provide a channel for that interaction to occur.

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