by Henry Chang and Ken Kundert
Adopting analog verification can be a difficult; we guide you through the process. In this video, we describe our software, classes, consulting, and services offerings.
For more information on MiM, please contact consulting@designers-guide.com
For more information on Designer's Guide, please visit www.designers-guide.com
The playlist for all of our videos on our specification-driven approach can be found at: [ Ссылка ]
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Ken Kundert and Henry Chang founded Designer’s Guide in 2005. Since the company's founding they’ve been assisting semiconductor companies with analog, mixed-signal and chip verification. They started with consulting. Then as they gained insight into the issues and problems and solutions, they began teaching classes. It was then, after seeing many projects and talking to many people, that they realized where the true bottleneck is for analog and mixed-signal verification. They then developed a software tool that removes this bottleneck and makes it so that one doesn’t have to be an expert to have good models and to verify that one’s models and schematics are equivalent. The tool is called MiM, which stands for Models in Minutes. MiM does a lot more though, and that’s what they’ll be discussing on this YouTube Channel. Designer's Guide also provides on shore and off shore analog, mixed-signal, chip-level modeling and verification services.
Ken Kundert was a fellow at Cadence prior to founding Designer’s Guide. He invented the Spectre simulator, leading its development and leading the related efforts of creating the Verilog-A and Verilog-AMS languages as well as developing Cadence’s AMS Designer mixed-signals simulator. Prior to that Ken received his Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from UC Berkeley and had been an analog and microwave designer prior working at HP and Tektronix.
Henry Chang was an architect at Cadence prior to founding Designer’s Guide. He worked in R&D and methodology services where he worked on analog and mixed-signal design flows — focused on improving the efficiency of design and on verification. Prior to Cadence, Henry also received his Ph.D. from UC Berkeley where his research was focused a top-down design driven methodology for analog circuits.
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