From online payments and electronic banking transactions to organizing company documents and mission-critical supply chain management systems, cloud computing now plays an ever-present role in both consumer and enterprise applications. In general, cloud computing's "pay-as-you-go" elasticity – requiring little upfront investment – tends to be its main value proposition to IT departments, although security and service disruptions are potential risks that come to mind.
But what does cloud computing mean for the FPGA design engineer? How can seemingly unlimited server resources help engineers in our daily work? This article examines the benefits and potential pitfalls of cloud computing in FPGA design from a practical, day-to-day viewpoint.
Featured post
Top 5 books to refer for a VHDL beginner
VHDL (VHSIC-HDL, Very High-Speed Integrated Circuit Hardware Description Language) is a hardware description language used in electronic des...
Showing posts with label Cloud Computing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cloud Computing. Show all posts
Tuesday, 12 March 2013
FPGA design heads into the Cloud computing
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
-
This is 8-bit microprocessor with 5 instructions. It is based on 8080 architecture. This architecture called SAP for Simple-As-Possible comp...
-
Q1: What is UVM? What is the advantage of UVM? Ans: UVM (Universal Verification Methodology) is a standardized methodology for verify...
-
There are some differences between UDIMMs and RDIMMs that are important in choosing the best options for memory performance. First, let’s ta...
-
Up/down counter circuits are very useful devices. A common application is in machine motion control, where devices called rotary shaft encod...
-
A small RISC CPU (written in VHDL) that is compatible with the 12 bit opcode PIC family. Single cycle operation normally, two cycles when th...