ga Croatian Kuna(HRK)/Bulgarian Lev(BGN) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:50 UTC 1 Croatian Kuna = 0.2602 Bulgarian Lev Full Article Croatian Kuna
ga Peruvian Nuevo Sol(PEN)/Ugandan Shilling(UGX) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 7:57:03 UTC 1 Peruvian Nuevo Sol = 1118.0569 Ugandan Shilling Full Article Peruvian Nuevo Sol
ga Peruvian Nuevo Sol(PEN)/Singapore Dollar(SGD) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 7:57:03 UTC 1 Peruvian Nuevo Sol = 0.4156 Singapore Dollar Full Article Peruvian Nuevo Sol
ga Peruvian Nuevo Sol(PEN)/Hungarian Forint(HUF) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 7:57:03 UTC 1 Peruvian Nuevo Sol = 95.068 Hungarian Forint Full Article Peruvian Nuevo Sol
ga Peruvian Nuevo Sol(PEN)/Bulgarian Lev(BGN) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 7:57:03 UTC 1 Peruvian Nuevo Sol = 0.5312 Bulgarian Lev Full Article Peruvian Nuevo Sol
ga Dominican Peso(DOP)/Ugandan Shilling(UGX) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:46 UTC 1 Dominican Peso = 69.046 Ugandan Shilling Full Article Dominican Peso
ga Dominican Peso(DOP)/Singapore Dollar(SGD) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:46 UTC 1 Dominican Peso = 0.0257 Singapore Dollar Full Article Dominican Peso
ga Dominican Peso(DOP)/Hungarian Forint(HUF) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:46 UTC 1 Dominican Peso = 5.871 Hungarian Forint Full Article Dominican Peso
ga Dominican Peso(DOP)/Bulgarian Lev(BGN) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:46 UTC 1 Dominican Peso = 0.0328 Bulgarian Lev Full Article Dominican Peso
ga Papua New Guinean Kina(PGK)/Ugandan Shilling(UGX) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:46 UTC 1 Papua New Guinean Kina = 1107.8423 Ugandan Shilling Full Article Papua New Guinean Kina
ga Papua New Guinean Kina(PGK)/Singapore Dollar(SGD) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:46 UTC 1 Papua New Guinean Kina = 0.4118 Singapore Dollar Full Article Papua New Guinean Kina
ga Papua New Guinean Kina(PGK)/Hungarian Forint(HUF) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:46 UTC 1 Papua New Guinean Kina = 94.1995 Hungarian Forint Full Article Papua New Guinean Kina
ga Papua New Guinean Kina(PGK)/Bulgarian Lev(BGN) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:46 UTC 1 Papua New Guinean Kina = 0.5263 Bulgarian Lev Full Article Papua New Guinean Kina
ga Brunei Dollar(BND)/Ugandan Shilling(UGX) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:45 UTC 1 Brunei Dollar = 2689.0452 Ugandan Shilling Full Article Brunei Dollar
ga Brunei Dollar(BND)/Singapore Dollar(SGD) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:45 UTC 1 Brunei Dollar = 0.9996 Singapore Dollar Full Article Brunei Dollar
ga Brunei Dollar(BND)/Hungarian Forint(HUF) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:45 UTC 1 Brunei Dollar = 228.6487 Hungarian Forint Full Article Brunei Dollar
ga Brunei Dollar(BND)/Bulgarian Lev(BGN) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:45 UTC 1 Brunei Dollar = 1.2775 Bulgarian Lev Full Article Brunei Dollar
ga [Men's Basketball] Saturday 1/11/20 Men's Basketball Game Postponed to 2/12/20 By www.haskellathletics.com Published On :: Fri, 10 Jan 2020 10:55:00 -0600 Full Article
ga [Men's Basketball] Men's Basketball Prepares for Game Against Nebraska Christian College By www.haskellathletics.com Published On :: Mon, 13 Jan 2020 13:00:00 -0600 Full Article
ga Vintage Vega By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2007-09-21T11:00:00+00:00 Over ten years ago, Suzanne Vega hit a terribly sexy groove with an album called Nine Objects of Desire that made me seek out every CD she has done since then. She’s kept us waiting for six years for her new studio effort, but it’s such vintage Vega that the reward is well worth the wait. The first thing to note on Beauty & Crime is that producer Jimmy Hogarth and mixer Tchad Blake have tuned the album’s tracks entirely to suit Vega’s rather inflexible, breathy voice. With the sonic help, Vega is freed up to focus on enunciating the layers behind her lyrics. Yet Hogarth and Blake also manage to seed each song with finely crafted arrangements and subtle hooks that make them musically interesting. Although Vega uses a large canvas to record her ruminations, her most touching songs are those that are personal. On “Ludlow Street” she quietly mourns the passing of her brother: “I find each stoop and doorway’s incomplete/without you there”. On the superbly produced “Bound”, she seems to be confirming her longtime friend Paul Mills’s continuing interest in her after her divorce from Michael Froom in 2001. On “As You Are Now” she manages – against all odds - to fit in a parent’s love for her child in four sweet verses. Rave Out © 2007 IndiaUncut.com. All rights reserved. India Uncut * The IU Blog * Rave Out * Extrowords * Workoutable * Linkastic Full Article
ga Trump and Modi are playing a Lose-Lose game By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-06-23T03:26:43+00:00 This is the 22nd installment of The Rationalist, my column for the Times of India. Trade wars are on the rise, and it’s enough to get any nationalist all het up and excited. Earlier this week, Narendra Modi’s government announced that it would start imposing tariffs on 28 US products starting today. This is a response to similar treatment towards us from the US. There is one thing I would invite you to consider: Trump and Modi are not engaged in a war with each other. Instead, they are waging war on their own people. Let’s unpack that a bit. Part of the reason Trump came to power is that he provided simple and wrong answers for people’s problems. He responded to the growing jobs crisis in middle America with two explanations: one, foreigners are coming and taking your jobs; two, your jobs are being shipped overseas. Both explanations are wrong but intuitive, and they worked for Trump. (He is stupid enough that he probably did not create these narratives for votes but actually believes them.) The first of those leads to the demonising of immigrants. The second leads to a demonising of trade. Trump has acted on his rhetoric after becoming president, and a modern US version of our old ‘Indira is India’ slogan might well be, “Trump is Tariff. Tariff is Trump.” Contrary to the fulminations of the economically illiterate, all tariffs are bad, without exception. Let me illustrate this with an example. Say there is a fictional product called Brump. A local Brump costs Rs 100. Foreign manufacturers appear and offer better Brumps at a cheaper price, say Rs 90. Consumers shift to foreign Brumps. Manufacturers of local Brumps get angry, and form an interest group. They lobby the government – or bribe it with campaign contributions – to impose a tariff on import of Brumps. The government puts a 20-rupee tariff. The foreign Brumps now cost Rs 110, and people start buying local Brumps again. This is a good thing, right? Local businesses have been helped, and local jobs have been saved. But this is only the seen effect. The unseen effect of this tariff is that millions of Brump buyers would have saved Rs 10-per-Brump if there were no tariffs. This money would have gone out into the economy, been part of new demand, generated more jobs. Everyone would have been better off, and the overall standard of living would have been higher. That brings to me to an essential truth about tariffs. Every tariff is a tax on your own people. And every intervention in markets amounts to a distribution of wealth from the people at large to specific interest groups. (In other words, from the poor to the rich.) The costs of this are dispersed and invisible – what is Rs 10 to any of us? – and the benefits are large and worth fighting for: Local manufacturers of Brumps can make crores extra. Much modern politics amounts to manufacturers of Brumps buying politicians to redistribute money from us to them. There are second-order effects of protectionism as well. When the US imposes tariffs on other countries, those countries may respond by imposing tariffs back. Raw materials for many goods made locally are imported, and as these become expensive, so do those goods. That quintessential American product, the iPhone, uses parts from 43 countries. As local products rise in price because of expensive foreign parts, prices rise, demand goes down, jobs are lost, and everyone is worse off. Trump keeps talking about how he wants to ‘win’ at trade, but trade is not a zero-sum game. The most misunderstood term in our times is probably ‘trade-deficit’. A country has a trade deficit when it imports more than what it exports, and Trump thinks of that as a bad thing. It is not. I run a trade deficit with my domestic help and my local grocery store. I buy more from them than they do from me. That is fine, because we all benefit. It is a win-win game. Similarly, trade between countries is really trade between the people of both countries – and people trade with each other because they are both better off. To interfere in that process is to reduce the value created in their lives. It is immoral. To modify a slogan often identified with libertarians like me, ‘Tariffs are Theft.’ These trade wars, thus, carry a touch of the absurd. Any leader who imposes tariffs is imposing a tax on his own people. Just see the chain of events: Trump taxes the American people. In retaliation, Modi taxes the Indian people. Trump raises taxes. Modi raises taxes. Nationalists in both countries cheer. Interests groups in both countries laugh their way to the bank. What kind of idiocy is this? How long will this lose-lose game continue? © 2007 IndiaUncut.com. All rights reserved. India Uncut * The IU Blog * Rave Out * Extrowords * Workoutable * Linkastic Full Article
ga Gary Smith at DAC 2015: How EDA Can Expand Into New Directions By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Mon, 08 Jun 2015 12:55:38 GMT First, the good news. The EDA industry will grow from $6.2 billion in 2015 to $9.0 billion in 2019, according to Gary Smith, chief analyst at Gary Smith EDA. Year-to-year growth rates will range from +4% to +11.2%. But in his annual presentation on the eve of the Design Automation Conference (DAC 2015), Smith noted that Wall Street is unimpressed. “The people I talk to want long-term steady growth, no sharp up-turns, no sharp downturns,” Smith said. “To the rest of Wall Street, we’re boring.” Smith spent the rest of his talk noting how EDA can be a lot less boring and, potentially, a whole lot bigger. For starters, what if we add semiconductor IP to EDA revenues? Now we’re looking at $12.2 billion in revenue by 2019, Smith said. (He acknowledged, however, that the IP market itself is going to take a “dip” due to the move towards platform-based IP and away from conventional piecemeal IP). This still is not enough to get Wall Street’s attention. Another possibility is to bring embedded software development into the EDA industry. This is not a huge market – about $2.6 billion today – but it is an “easy growth market for us,” according to Smith. Chasing the Big Bucks But the “big bucks” are in mechanical CAD (MCAD), Smith said. In the past the MCAD market has always been bigger than EDA, but now EDA is catching up. The MCAD market is about $6.6 billion now. Synopsys and Cadence are larger than PTC and Siemens, two of the main players in MCAD. There may be some good acquisition possibilities coming up for EDA vendors, Smith said – and if we don’t buy MCAD companies, they might buy EDA companies. Consider, for example, that Ansoft bought Apache and Dassault bought Synchronicity. (Note: Siemens PLM Software is a first-time exhibitor at DAC 2015). What about other domains? Smith said that EDA companies could conceivably move into optical design, applications development software, biomedical design, and chemical design. The last if these is probably the most tenuous; Smith noted that EDA vendors have yet to look into chemical design. Applications development software is the biggest market on the above list, but that means competing with Microsoft, IBM, and Oracle. “You’re in with the big boys – is that a good idea?” Smith asked. Perhaps there’s an opening for a “big play” for an MCAD provider. Smith noted that mechanical vendors are focusing on product data management (PDM). This “is really the IT of design,” Smith said. “They have a lot of hope that the IoT [Internet of things] market is going to give them an opportunity to capture the software that goes from the ground to the cloud. Maybe we can let them have PDM and see if we can take the tool market away from them, or acquire it away from them.” In conclusion, Smith asked, should the EDA industry accelerate its growth? “The mechanical vendors have already shown interest in acquiring EDA vendors,” he said. “We may not have a choice.” Richard Goering NOTE: Catch our live blog from DAC 2015, beginning Monday morning, June 8! Click here Full Article MCAD embedded software EDA Gary Smith DAC 2015 DAC 2014
ga DAC 2015: Jim Hogan Warns of “Looming Crisis” in Automotive Electronics By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 23 Jun 2015 21:31:00 GMT EDA investor and former executive Jim Hogan is optimistic about automotive electronics, but he has some concerns as well. At the recent Design Automation Conference (DAC 2015), he delivered a speech titled “The Looming Quality, Reliability, and Safety Crisis in Automotive Electronics...Why is it and what can we do to avoid it?" Hogan gave the keynote speech for IP Talks!, a series of over 30 half-hour presentations located at the ChipEstimate.com booth. Presenters included ARM, Cadence, eSilicon, Kilopass, Sidense, SilabTech, Sonics, Synopsys, True Circuits, and TSMC. Held in an informal setting, the talks addressed the challenges faced by SoC design teams and showed how the latest developments in semiconductor IP can contribute to design success. Jim Hogan delivers keynote speech at DAC 2015 IP Talks! Hogan talked about several phases of automotive electronics. These include assisted driving to avoid collisions, controlled automation of isolated tasks such as parallel parking, and, finally, fully autonomous vehicles, which Hogan expects to see in 15 to 20 years. The top immediate priorities for automotive electronics designers, he said, will be government regulation, fuel economy, advanced safety, and infotainment. More Code than a Boeing 777 According to Hogan, today’s automobiles use 50-100 microcontrollers per car, resulting in a worldwide automotive semiconductor market of around $40 billion. The global market for advanced automotive electronics is expected to reach $240 billion by 2020. Software is growing faster in the automotive market than it is in smartphones. Hogan quoted a Ford vice president who observed that there are more lines of code in a Ford Fusion car than a Boeing 777 airplane. One unique challenge for automotive electronics designers is long-term reliability. This is because a typical U.S. car stays on the road for 15 years, Hogan said. Americans are holding onto new vehicles for a record 71.4 months. Another challenge is regulatory compliance. Aeronautics is highly regulated from manufacturing to air traffic control, and the same will probably be true of automated cars. Hogan speculated that the Department of Transportation will be the regulatory authority for autonomous cars. Today, automotive electronics providers must comply with the ISO26262 automotive functional safety specification. So where do we go from here? “We’ve got to change our mindset,” Hogan said. “We’ve got to focus on safety and reliability and demand a different kind of engineering discipline.” You can watch Hogan’s entire presentation by clicking on the video icon below, or clicking here. You can also watch other IP Talks! videos from DAC 2015 here. https://youtu.be/qL4kAEu-PNw Richard Goering Related Blog Posts DAC 2015: See the Latest in Semiconductor IP at “IP Talks!” Automotive Functional Safety Drives New Chapter in IC Verification Full Article DAC 2015: ChipEstimate.com Hogan automotive electronics self-driving cars IP Talks
ga regarding digital flow By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 01 Feb 2020 11:11:53 GMT Respected sir, How can i design and simulate cmos inverter using digital flow and also ineed to do prelayout ans post layout for the same cmos inverter..can i use cadence encounter for this experiments Full Article
ga Can Voltus do an IR drop analysis on a negative supply? By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 19 Feb 2020 18:20:47 GMT I have been using Voltus to do IR drop analysis but I got caught on one signal. It is negative. When I use: set_pg_nets -net negsupply -voltage -5 -threshold -4.5 -package_net_name NEGSUP -force Voltus dies with a backtrace. Looking at the beginning of the trace you see it suggests that the problem is it set maximum to -5 and minimum to 0. Is there another way to express a negative voltage supply for IR drop analysis? Full Article
ga Post-synthesis Simulation Failing when lp_insert_clock_gating true By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 14 Aug 2019 18:36:21 GMT When I enable clock gating in my synthesis flow (using Genus 18.15), my simulation (using Xcelium) on the post-synthesis netlist fails. The simulation succeeds pre-synthesis and also if I remove clock-gating in the design. I use set_db lp_insert_clock_gating true to enable clock gating during synthesis. I printed out some of the signals from the netlist and can see where it fails (it incorrectly writes a register). However, I am not sure how to solve this issue or what I should be looking for. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks. Full Article
ga What’s Hot in Verification at this Year’s CDNLive? It’s Portable Stimulus Again! By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 27 Mar 2018 21:23:00 GMT CDNLive is a user conference, and verification is one of the largest categories of content with multiple tracks covering multiple days. Portable stimulus is one of the hottest new areas in verification, and continues to be popular in all venues. At l...(read more) Full Article CDNLive Perspec pss portable stimulus
ga DAC 2019 Preview – Multi-MHz Prototyping for Billion Gate Designs, AI, ML, 5G, Safety, Security and More By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 29 May 2019 23:45:00 GMT Vegas, here we come. All of us fun EDA engineers at once. Be prepared, next week’s Design Automation Conference will be busy! The trends I had outlined after last DAC in 2018—system design, cloud, and machine learning—have...(read more) Full Article security 5G DAC DAC2019 prototyping palladium z1 Safety tortuga logic Protium Emulation ARM AI
ga About Degassing Hole By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 05 Dec 2019 02:08:06 GMT I use "Degassing" function in APD. It provides the options "Even Layers" and "Odd Layers". My first question is that is there any additional setting to choose the specific layer? The second question is that is there any way to select a range to place degassing hoe? I don't want to place holes at the whole layer. Thanks! Full Article
ga Power gain circle interpretation question By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 21 Mar 2020 20:58:34 GMT Hello, i have made a power gain circle for 30dB,for setting a GAIN we need to set a matching network for input and output inpedance. but in this Gain circles it shows me only one complex number instead of two.(As shown bellow) Where did i go wrong with using it to find the input and output impedancies needed to be matched in order to have 30dB gain?Thanks. Full Article
ga producing gain circles in cadence virtuoso By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 27 Mar 2020 20:20:32 GMT Hello, i am trying to produce a gain circles on a simple transistor as shown bellow. i have defined the range from 1 til 30 dB and i dont get any circle just dots in infinity? Where did i go wrong?Thanks. Full Article
ga How to force the garbage collection By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 05 Mar 2020 03:31:57 GMT I have a script to handle many polys in memory in allegro. But after the completion of the script, I run the axlPolyMemUse(), it reports (31922 0 0 55076 252482) Seems too many polys are still in the memory,and they are not being used. So how to delete these polys from the memory? And reclaim the memory? BTW. I have no skill dev license. So gc() function doesn't work. Thanks. Full Article
ga Creating a circle at 10 mil air gap from a pin By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 22 Apr 2020 10:22:04 GMT Hi, I'm trying to create a circle from a pin with 10 mil air gap and at 45 degree rotation. The problem that im facing is that, I'm unable to get the bBox upper left coordinates. Because I want my circle to be placed from that coordinate with a 10 mil air gap. And the pins are "regular" and are placed on "Etch/Top" Layer. Kindly help me in solving this issue. Full Article
ga Trump and Modi are playing a Lose-Lose game By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-06-23T03:26:43+00:00 This is the 22nd installment of The Rationalist, my column for the Times of India. Trade wars are on the rise, and it’s enough to get any nationalist all het up and excited. Earlier this week, Narendra Modi’s government announced that it would start imposing tariffs on 28 US products starting today. This is a response to similar treatment towards us from the US. There is one thing I would invite you to consider: Trump and Modi are not engaged in a war with each other. Instead, they are waging war on their own people. Let’s unpack that a bit. Part of the reason Trump came to power is that he provided simple and wrong answers for people’s problems. He responded to the growing jobs crisis in middle America with two explanations: one, foreigners are coming and taking your jobs; two, your jobs are being shipped overseas. Both explanations are wrong but intuitive, and they worked for Trump. (He is stupid enough that he probably did not create these narratives for votes but actually believes them.) The first of those leads to the demonising of immigrants. The second leads to a demonising of trade. Trump has acted on his rhetoric after becoming president, and a modern US version of our old ‘Indira is India’ slogan might well be, “Trump is Tariff. Tariff is Trump.” Contrary to the fulminations of the economically illiterate, all tariffs are bad, without exception. Let me illustrate this with an example. Say there is a fictional product called Brump. A local Brump costs Rs 100. Foreign manufacturers appear and offer better Brumps at a cheaper price, say Rs 90. Consumers shift to foreign Brumps. Manufacturers of local Brumps get angry, and form an interest group. They lobby the government – or bribe it with campaign contributions – to impose a tariff on import of Brumps. The government puts a 20-rupee tariff. The foreign Brumps now cost Rs 110, and people start buying local Brumps again. This is a good thing, right? Local businesses have been helped, and local jobs have been saved. But this is only the seen effect. The unseen effect of this tariff is that millions of Brump buyers would have saved Rs 10-per-Brump if there were no tariffs. This money would have gone out into the economy, been part of new demand, generated more jobs. Everyone would have been better off, and the overall standard of living would have been higher. That brings to me to an essential truth about tariffs. Every tariff is a tax on your own people. And every intervention in markets amounts to a distribution of wealth from the people at large to specific interest groups. (In other words, from the poor to the rich.) The costs of this are dispersed and invisible – what is Rs 10 to any of us? – and the benefits are large and worth fighting for: Local manufacturers of Brumps can make crores extra. Much modern politics amounts to manufacturers of Brumps buying politicians to redistribute money from us to them. There are second-order effects of protectionism as well. When the US imposes tariffs on other countries, those countries may respond by imposing tariffs back. Raw materials for many goods made locally are imported, and as these become expensive, so do those goods. That quintessential American product, the iPhone, uses parts from 43 countries. As local products rise in price because of expensive foreign parts, prices rise, demand goes down, jobs are lost, and everyone is worse off. Trump keeps talking about how he wants to ‘win’ at trade, but trade is not a zero-sum game. The most misunderstood term in our times is probably ‘trade-deficit’. A country has a trade deficit when it imports more than what it exports, and Trump thinks of that as a bad thing. It is not. I run a trade deficit with my domestic help and my local grocery store. I buy more from them than they do from me. That is fine, because we all benefit. It is a win-win game. Similarly, trade between countries is really trade between the people of both countries – and people trade with each other because they are both better off. To interfere in that process is to reduce the value created in their lives. It is immoral. To modify a slogan often identified with libertarians like me, ‘Tariffs are Theft.’ These trade wars, thus, carry a touch of the absurd. Any leader who imposes tariffs is imposing a tax on his own people. Just see the chain of events: Trump taxes the American people. In retaliation, Modi taxes the Indian people. Trump raises taxes. Modi raises taxes. Nationalists in both countries cheer. Interests groups in both countries laugh their way to the bank. What kind of idiocy is this? How long will this lose-lose game continue? The India Uncut Blog © 2010 Amit Varma. All rights reserved. Follow me on Twitter. Full Article
ga Info regarding released version Cadence IES simulator By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 06 Feb 2020 07:42:31 GMT Hello folks, Greetings. One of my customer claims that he is using Cadence IES version 18.09.011 with Vivado 2019.2. The version of IES that we officially support with Vivado 2019.2 is 15.20.073. Though the tool is forward compatible, I am not sure what are the versions of IES that are released after 15.20.073. Could you please give me a list of the versions of Cadence IES released after 15.20.073 and which is the latest version as of now ? Best regards, Chinmay Full Article
ga Regarding Save/Restore Settings for Transient Simulation By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 28 Apr 2020 16:20:14 GMT Hello, I am running a transient simulation on my circuit and usually my simulation time took me more than a day (The circuit is quite big). I am usually saving specific nodes to decrease the simulation time. My problem is, since it usually took me one day to finish I need to save my trans simulation just in case something bad happens. I am aware that the transient simulation have the options for save/restore. But, when I tried to use it I have some problem. Whenever I restore the save file, it starts where it ends before (expected function) but my data is incomplete. It doesn't save the previous data. Its kind of my data is incomplete. What I did is set the saveperiod and savefile. I hope someone can help me. Thank you! Regards, Kiel Full Article
ga Help!!, Spectre error: Illegal library definition found in netlist for TSMC 180nm By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 08:11:12 GMT Dear All,When I want to start simulation with spectre the error says:Fatal error: Illegal library definition found in netlistI set the model file correctly, but I don't know why it errors!I opened the ADE>>Setup>>Model libraryand I tried to modify the path of models file (SCS files)It gives me "Illegal library definition found in netlist"Thanks. Full Article
ga News18 Urdu: Latest News Warangal By urdu.news18.com Published On :: visit News18 Urdu for latest news, breaking news, news headlines and updates from Warangal on politics, sports, entertainment, cricket, crime and more. Full Article
ga News18 Urdu: Latest News South 24 Parganas By urdu.news18.com Published On :: visit News18 Urdu for latest news, breaking news, news headlines and updates from South 24 Parganas on politics, sports, entertainment, cricket, crime and more. Full Article
ga News18 Urdu: Latest News Mahendragarh By urdu.news18.com Published On :: visit News18 Urdu for latest news, breaking news, news headlines and updates from Mahendragarh on politics, sports, entertainment, cricket, crime and more. Full Article
ga News18 Urdu: Latest News Karimganj By urdu.news18.com Published On :: visit News18 Urdu for latest news, breaking news, news headlines and updates from Karimganj on politics, sports, entertainment, cricket, crime and more. Full Article
ga News18 Urdu: Latest News Ambedkarnagar By urdu.news18.com Published On :: visit News18 Urdu for latest news, breaking news, news headlines and updates from Ambedkarnagar on politics, sports, entertainment, cricket, crime and more. Full Article
ga News18 Urdu: Latest News Nayagarh By urdu.news18.com Published On :: visit News18 Urdu for latest news, breaking news, news headlines and updates from Nayagarh on politics, sports, entertainment, cricket, crime and more. Full Article
ga News18 Urdu: Latest News Azamgarh By urdu.news18.com Published On :: visit News18 Urdu for latest news, breaking news, news headlines and updates from Azamgarh on politics, sports, entertainment, cricket, crime and more. Full Article
ga News18 Urdu: Latest News Ahmednagar By urdu.news18.com Published On :: visit News18 Urdu for latest news, breaking news, news headlines and updates from Ahmednagar on politics, sports, entertainment, cricket, crime and more. Full Article
ga News18 Urdu: Latest News Kishanganj By urdu.news18.com Published On :: visit News18 Urdu for latest news, breaking news, news headlines and updates from Kishanganj on politics, sports, entertainment, cricket, crime and more. Full Article
ga News18 Urdu: Latest News Sibsagar By urdu.news18.com Published On :: visit News18 Urdu for latest news, breaking news, news headlines and updates from Sibsagar on politics, sports, entertainment, cricket, crime and more. Full Article
ga News18 Urdu: Latest News Nagapattinam By urdu.news18.com Published On :: visit News18 Urdu for latest news, breaking news, news headlines and updates from Nagapattinam on politics, sports, entertainment, cricket, crime and more. Full Article