New Products
Achronix Semi : FPGA performs up to 1.5 GHz


Signaling a breakthrough in three decades of field-programmable gate array (FPGA) design where performance has been sacrificed for flexibility and time-to-market, Achronix Semiconductor today announced that it has already begun shipping the world's fastest FPGAs. The Speedster family, with the SPD60 as its initial member, delivers speeds up to 1.5 GHz, which represents a three-fold increase in performance over existing FPGAs.
Achronix early engagement customers have already found success with Speedster in applications requiring ASIC-like performance, namely networking, telecommunications, test and measurement, encryption and other high-performance applications. These types of applications are an ideal fit for the Speedster family of FPGAs.
Achronix has partnered with leading synthesis vendors to make industry-standard tools and methodologies compatible with the Speedster family. Designers can leverage their existing Verilog and VHDL designs. The Achronix CAD environment supports both Synopsys (formerly Synplicity) Synplify Pro and Mentor Graphics' Precision Synthesis tools for RTL synthesis. In addition, the Achronix CAD environment provides the necessary tools for physical implementation, performance optimisation, timing analysis, simulation, debug, and device programming.
"Designers have been lulled into expecting only incremental performance improvements with each new generation of FPGA," said John Holt, Achronix founder, chairman and CEO. "Our product provides a disruptive leap in performance that opens up new worlds of application design previously unavailable to engineers using FPGAs."
The Speedster family of FPGAs uses the Achronix patented picoPIPE acceleration technology that speeds the way data moves through the FPGA fabric. In the absence of a global clock, picoPIPEs use simple handshake protocols to efficiently control data flow, resulting in significantly improved performance, all along using standard RTL for design-entry and employing familiar FPGA tools. By coupling this innovative technology with a 10.3 Gbps serializer/deserializer (SerDes) to facilitate high system throughput and integrated DDR2/DDR3 controllers for high-speed memory interface, the Speedster family provides the I/O speed to match its outstanding core performance. The device is manufactured in TSMC's high performance 65nm G+ CMOS process.
"The FPGA market is a tough arena to enter and a truly innovative approach is needed to compete and succeed in this space," said Rich Wawrzyniak, senior market analyst at Semico Research Corp. "Based on their innovative approach to combining the benefits of their picoPIPE technology with a synchronous interface, coupled with an experienced team of FPGA industry executives and designers, Achronix appears to be the company that can finally provide an FPGA with ASIC-like performance and deliver a product that can compete with ASIC's at the high end of the market."
More information about the Speedster family
The Speedster 10.3 Gbps SerDes supports numerous high-speed interfaces, such as 40G/100G Ethernet, CEI-6G, 10 Gbps backplane, XFI, PCI Express (Generations 1 and 2), XAUI, Serial Rapid IO and Infiniband. Speedster FPGAs also include a complete out-of-the-box DDR2/DDR3 solution, which includes a physical layer and controller supporting memory interface speeds of up to 1066 Mbps. A key feature of the Achronix picoPIPE technology is its tolerance to substantial variations in supply voltage. This gives users a valuable power-management tool. Power consumption can be lowered by adjusting core supply voltage. Volume pricing for the Speedster FPGA family ranges from under $200 to $2500.
About Achronix's Management Team and Funding
Achronix's management team consists of key industry veterans who each bring decades of FPGA, ASIC, and structured ASIC design and marketing expertise from several industry stalwarts such as Xilinx, LSI Logic, and Actel. John Lofton Holt - Achronix's founder, chairman and CEO - is an experienced entrepreneur and electrical engineer. He leads a team that includes Dr. Rajit Manohar, founder and CTO, who is an internationally recognized pioneer in asynchronous semiconductor design and implementation. New Science Ventures, Battery Ventures, Entrepia Ventures, and Easton Capital Investment Group have invested $34.4 million in the company to date.
About Achronix Semiconductor
Achronix Semiconductor is a privately held fabless corporation based in San Jose, Calif. Achronix builds the world's fastest field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) which use a unique patented picoPIPE(tm) acceleration technology capable of up to 1.5 GHz peak performance. Achronix has sales offices and representatives in the United States, Europe, China, Japan, and Korea, and has research and design offices in Ithaca, New York and Bangalore, India.
Find out more at http://www.achronix.com.
For more information contact:
Laurie Brunner Ewell
Achronix Semiconductor
lbrunner@achronix.com
+1 408 889 4144
Note: The above text is the public part of the press release obtained from the manufacturer (with minor modifications). EETimes Europe cannot be held responsible for the claims and statements made by the manufacturer. The text is intended as a supplement to the new product presentations in EETimes Europe magazine.
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This month Keithley Instruments is giving away two of its Model 2200 power supplies, worth 735 Euros each, for EETimes Europe's readers to win. The Model 2200-20-5: 20V, 5A, 100W on offer is one of five general-purpose programmable DC power supplies recently launched by the company, designed for source measurement instruments for component, module, and device characterization and test applications.
Part of the Series 2200 family, the unit’s voltage output accuracy is specified at 0.03% and its current output accuracy is 0.05%. The supply’s high output (1mV) and measurement (0.1mA) resolution makes it well-suited for characterizing low power circuits and devices in applications such as measuring idle mode and sleep mode currents to confirm devices can meet today’s ever-more-challenging goals for energy efficiency.
And the winners are:
In our previous reader offer, EPC was giving away ten of its EPC9002 development board kits, worth USD 95 each.
Lucky winners include I. Blythe and C. Hardman from the UK, M. Casartelli and D. Cogliati from Italy, C. Cossio from Spain, W. Milarch from Germany, r. Milewicz from Poland, M. Prascak from Slovakia, A. Raidl from Austria and M. Taslakov from Bulgaria.
All should be receiving their kits soon. Let's wish them some interesting findings with their projects.
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