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Peruvian Nuevo Sol(PEN)/Costa Rican Colon(CRC)

1 Peruvian Nuevo Sol = 167.3817 Costa Rican Colon



  • Peruvian Nuevo Sol

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[Men's Golf] Men's Golf Looking For Recruits

Haskell Golf team, Layne Brasswell and Russell Parker are on the search for more teammates!




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[Cross Country] Haskell Invitational Rescheduled

The collegiate races for the Haskell Invitational have been rescheduled for October 11 at 4pm.




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[Cross Country] 2019 Cross Country Schedule is Released

The 2019 Haskell cross country schedule has been released and the Indians will compete at seven regular season meets before postseason action begins. The Purple and Gold will also play host to the Association of Independent Institutions conference meet as the defending champions on the men's side.

   




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[Cross Country] X.C. Competes in First Meet on 8/31/19

On Saturday August 31, 2019, both Women's and Men's Cross Country competed in their first meet of the season at Baker University.




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[Cross Country] Cross Country Travels to Bearcat Open 9/6/19!

Tomorrow, September 6, 2019, Haskell XC will compete in Bearcat open against Northwest MIssouri State!




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[Cross Country] Women's & Men's Cross Country Improve their Stats in Second Meet of the Season

Both Women's and Men's Cross Country improved their overall standings this weekend at the bearcat Open.




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[Cross Country] Haskell Cross Country Gets Ready for Meet at Rim Rock

Haskell Cross Country travels to Rim Rock meet at KU on Saturday October 5th, 2019. 




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[Cross Country] Cross Country Treads through the Mud at Rim Rock Classic

Both Men's and Women's Cross Country were put the the test at the Rim Rock Classic XC Meet with unpleasant weather. 




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[Cross Country] Cross Country Prepares for Haskell Invitational on 10/12/19

This week Cross Country is training for their first home meet on Saturday October 12, 2019 at 9:15 & 10:00 am during Homcoming Weekend!




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[Cross Country] Cross Country is at the Starting Line

Men's and Women's Cross Country is ready to run today!





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[Cross Country] Women's Cross Country finishes off Haskell Invitational.

Women's Cross Country Pictured, Chantel Yazzie crossing the finish line as Haskell's first Women's Cross Country runner to cross at the Haskell Invitational. 




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[Cross Country] Cross Country Runs Well Last Meet Before A.I.I. Championship Meet

Haskell Cross Country teams traveled to Mount Mercy in Iowa this past Saturday and performed well a week before A.I.I. Championship Meet on Saturday 11/9/19.




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[Cross Country] A.I.I. Cross Country Championship Meet Concludes with Two of Haskell Runners ...




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[Cross Country] Dorian Daw & Max Tuckfield from Haskell XC Are Set To Run!

At 10:30 AM PST Dorian and Max will be off running!




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[Cross Country] Haskell Runs National Championships Meet with 335 Other Runners




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Dominican Peso(DOP)/Seychellois Rupee(SCR)

1 Dominican Peso = 0.3119 Seychellois Rupee




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Dominican Peso(DOP)/Croatian Kuna(HRK)

1 Dominican Peso = 0.1261 Croatian Kuna




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Dominican Peso(DOP)/Costa Rican Colon(CRC)

1 Dominican Peso = 10.3367 Costa Rican Colon




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Papua New Guinean Kina(PGK)/Seychellois Rupee(SCR)

1 Papua New Guinean Kina = 5.0047 Seychellois Rupee



  • Papua New Guinean Kina

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Papua New Guinean Kina(PGK)/Croatian Kuna(HRK)

1 Papua New Guinean Kina = 2.0227 Croatian Kuna



  • Papua New Guinean Kina

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Papua New Guinean Kina(PGK)/Costa Rican Colon(CRC)

1 Papua New Guinean Kina = 165.8525 Costa Rican Colon



  • Papua New Guinean Kina

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Brunei Dollar(BND)/Seychellois Rupee(SCR)

1 Brunei Dollar = 12.1479 Seychellois Rupee




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Brunei Dollar(BND)/Croatian Kuna(HRK)

1 Brunei Dollar = 4.9096 Croatian Kuna




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Brunei Dollar(BND)/Costa Rican Colon(CRC)

1 Brunei Dollar = 402.5707 Costa Rican Colon




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[Men's Basketball] Men's Basketball goes on the Road to Crowley's Ridge




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New York Cricket Club

Literate Indians should be familiar with Ashis Nandy’s remark: “Cricket is an Indian game accidentally discovered by the English.“ A Trinidadian Indian by the name of Chuck Ramkissoon, in Joseph O’Neill’s superbly inflected novel “Netherland”, is also fond of making bold pronouncements on the behalf of the game he wants to introduce to the U.S. “I’m saying that people, all people, Americans, whoever, are at their most civilized when they’re playing cricket. What’s the first thing that happens when Pakistan and India make peace? They play a cricket match…”

It’s now my turn to be bold: “Netherland” is more of an Indian novel than the recent, much feted, Indian fiction. This is not only because O’Neill’s novel feeds our national obsession with the game. Nor even its exquisite description of what transpires on the playing field: “…. where the white-clad ring of infielders, swanning figures on the vast oval, again and again converge in unison toward the batsman and again and again scatter back to their starting points, a repetition of pulmonary rhythm, as if the field breathed through its luminous visitors.” No. My pronouncement is based on the fact that the Indian characters in the book are highly individualized and yet fully global in their identity. “Netherland” is not a sociological-historical epic thesis, nor is it a shallow, cynical report on injustice in the hinterland. Rich in observation, reporting as much on the interior life as on the life outside, it is a captivating literary achievement. A masterpiece.

Rave Out © 2007 IndiaUncut.com. All rights reserved.
India Uncut * The IU Blog * Rave Out * Extrowords * Workoutable * Linkastic




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This Video Hurts the Sentiments of Hindu’s [sic] Across the World

I loved Nina Paley’s brilliant animated film Sita Sings the Blues. If you’re reading this, stop right now—and watch the film here.

Paley has set the story of the Ramayana to the 1920s jazz vocals of Annette Hanshaw. The epic tale is interwoven with Paley’s account of her husband’s move to India from where he dumps her by e-mail. The Ramayana is presented with the tagline: “The Greatest Break-Up Story Ever Told.”

All of this should make us curious. But there are other reasons for admiring this film:

The film returns us to the message that is made clear by every village-performance of the Ramlila: the epics are for everyone. Also, there is no authoritative narration of an epic. This film is aided by three shadow puppets who, drawing upon memory and unabashedly incomplete knowledge, boldly go where only pundits and philosophers have gone before. The result is a rendition of the epic that is gloriously a part of the everyday.

This idea is taken even further. Paley says that the work came from a shared culture, and it is to a shared culture that it must return: she has put the film on Creative Commons—viewers are invited to distribute, copy, remix the film.

Of course, such art drives the purists and fundamentalists crazy. On the Channel 13 website, “Durgadevi” and “Shridhar” rant about the evil done to Hinduism. It is as if Paley had lit her tail (tale!) and set our houses on fire!

Rave Out © 2007 IndiaUncut.com. All rights reserved.
India Uncut * The IU Blog * Rave Out * Extrowords * Workoutable * Linkastic




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Bombastic Little Creep

This character’s creator described him as “insufferable”, and called him a “detestable, bombastic, tiresome, ego-centric little creep”. On August 6 1975, the New York Times carried his obituary, the only time it has thus honoured a fictional character. Who?

Workoutable © 2007 IndiaUncut.com. All rights reserved.
India Uncut * The IU Blog * Rave Out * Extrowords * Workoutable * Linkastic




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For this Brave New World of cricket, we have IPL and England to thank

This is the 24th installment of The Rationalist, my column for the Times of India.

Back in the last decade, I was a cricket journalist for a few years. Then, around 12 years ago, I quit. I was jaded as hell. Every game seemed like déjà vu, nothing new, just another round on the treadmill. Although I would remember her fondly, I thought me and cricket were done.

And then I fell in love again. Cricket has changed in the last few years in glorious ways. There have been new ways of thinking about the game. There have been new ways of playing the game. Every season, new kinds of drama form, new nuances spring up into sight. This is true even of what had once seemed the dullest form of the game, one-day cricket. We are entering into a brave new world, and the team leading us there is England. No matter what happens in the World Cup final today – a single game involves a huge amount of luck – this England side are extraordinary. They are the bridge between eras, leading us into a Golden Age of Cricket.

I know that sounds hyperbolic, so let me stun you further by saying that I give the IPL credit for this. And now, having woken up you up with such a jolt on this lovely Sunday morning, let me explain.

Twenty20 cricket changed the game in two fundamental ways. Both ended up changing one-day cricket. The first was strategy.

When the first T20 games took place, teams applied an ODI template to innings-building: pinch-hit, build, slog. But this was not an optimal approach. In ODIs, teams have 11 players over 50 overs. In T20s, they have 11 players over 20 overs. The equation between resources and constraints is different. This means that the cost of a wicket goes down, and the cost of a dot ball goes up. Critically, it means that the value of aggression rises. A team need not follow the ODI template. In some instances, attacking for all 20 overs – or as I call it, ‘frontloading’ – may be optimal.

West Indies won the T20 World Cup in 2016 by doing just this, and England played similarly. And some sides began to realise was that they had been underestimating the value of aggression in one-day cricket as well.

The second fundamental way in which T20 cricket changed cricket was in terms of skills. The IPL and other leagues brought big money into the game. This changed incentives for budding cricketers. Relatively few people break into Test or ODI cricket, and play for their countries. A much wider pool can aspire to play T20 cricket – which also provides much more money. So it makes sense to spend the hundreds of hours you are in the nets honing T20 skills rather than Test match skills. Go to any nets practice, and you will find many more kids practising innovative aggressive strokes than playing the forward defensive.

As a result, batsmen today have a wider array of attacking strokes than earlier generations. Because every run counts more in T20 cricket, the standard of fielding has also shot up. And bowlers have also reacted to this by expanding their arsenal of tricks. Everyone has had to lift their game.

In one-day cricket, thus, two things have happened. One, there is better strategic understanding about the value of aggression. Two, batsmen are better equipped to act on the aggressive imperative. The game has continued to evolve.

Bowlers have reacted to this with greater aggression on their part, and this ongoing dialogue has been fascinating. The cricket writer Gideon Haigh once told me on my podcast that the 2015 World Cup featured a battle between T20 batting and Test match bowling.

This England team is the high watermark so far. Their aggression does not come from slogging. They bat with a combination of intent and skills that allows them to coast at 6-an-over, without needing to take too many risks. In normal conditions, thus, they can coast to 300 – any hitting they do beyond that is the bonus that takes them to 350 or 400. It’s a whole new level, illustrated by the fact that at one point a few days ago, they had seven consecutive scores of 300 to their name. Look at their scores over the last few years, in fact, and it is clear that this is the greatest batting side in the history of one-day cricket – by a margin.

There have been stumbles in this World Cup, but in the bigger picture, those are outliers. If England have a bad day in the final and New Zealand play their A-game, England might even lose today. But if Captain Morgan’s men play their A-game, they will coast to victory. New Zealand does not have those gears. No other team in the world does – for now.

But one day, they will all have to learn to play like this.



© 2007 IndiaUncut.com. All rights reserved.
India Uncut * The IU Blog * Rave Out * Extrowords * Workoutable * Linkastic




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DAC 2015: Jim Hogan Warns of “Looming Crisis” in Automotive Electronics

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




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About using Liberate to create .lib for a cell with two separate outputs.

Hello, my name is Hsukang. I want to use Liberate to create a .lib file for the following circuit. This is a scan FF with two separate outputs.   The question is that no matter how I described its function, the synthesis tool said its a manformed scan FF.  Has anyone ever encountered anything like this?How should I describe the function correctly?I found that almost standard flip-flop cells are with only one output Q or have Qn at the same time. Does Liberate support scan flip-flop cells with two separate outputs ?

Thanks.





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Reuse of Schematics across different Projects

Hi All,

I have 1 huge project(day X) which has different reference power supply designs.

Now I start a new project and I require 1 specific reference power supply from X.

What is the easist way to do this, other than a copy paste.

Is there a way to create say symbols or something similar, so that multiple different people could use it if they need, in their projects

Thanks for your help and suggestions.




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Force cell equivalence between same-footprint and same-functionality hard-macros in Conformal LEC

For a netlist vs. netlist LEC flow we have to solve the following problem:

- in the RTL code we replicate a large array of N x M all-identical hard-macros, let call them MACRO_A

- MACRO_A is pre-assembled in Innovus and contains digital parts and analog parts (bottom-up hierarchical flow)

- at top-level (full-chip) we instantiate this array of all-identical macros

- in the top-level place-and-route flow we perform ecoChangeCell to remaster the top row of this array with MACRO_B

- MACRO_B is just a copy of the original MACRO_A cell containing same pins position, same internal digital functionality and also same digital layout, only slight differences in one analog block inside the macro

- MACRO_A and MACRO_B have the same .lib file generated with the do_extract_model command at the end of the Innovus flow, they only differ in the name of the macro

- when performing post-synthesis netlist vs post-place-and-route we load .lib files of both macros in Conformal LEC

- the LEC flow fails because Conformal LEC sees only MACRO_A instantiated in the post-synthesis netlist and both MACRO_A and MACRO_B in the post-palce-and-route netlist

Since both digital functionality and STD cells layout are the same between MACRO_A and MACRO_B we don't want to keep track of this difference already at RTL stage, we just want to perform this ECO change in place-and-route and force Conformal to assume equivalence between MACRO_A and MACRO_B .

Basically what I'm searching for is something similar to the add_instance_equivalences Conformal command but that works between Golden and Revised designs on cell primitives/black-boxes .

Is this flow supported ?

Thanks in advance

Luca




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SpectreRF Tutorials and Appnotes... Shhhh... We Have a NEW Best Kept Secret!

It's been a while since you've heard from me...it has been a busy year for sure. One of the reasons I've been so quiet is that I was part of a team working diligently on our latest best kept secret: The MMSIM 12.1.1/MMSIM 13.1 Documentation has...(read more)




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See Cadence RF Technologies at IEEE International Microwave Symposium 2014

RF Enthusiasts, Come connect with Cadence RF experts and discover the latest advances in Cadence RF technologies, including Spectre RF at the IEEE International Microwave Symposium (IMS) 2014. This year, IMS will be held in Tampa, Florida. Cadence...(read more)




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Cadence Presenting Four Spectre RF MicroApp Papers at IMS2016, May 22-27

Hello Spectre RF Users, Next week is my all time favorite technical conference - the International Microwave Symposium IMS2016 , May 22-27 in San Francisco, CA at the Moscone Center. If you're at the conference, please stop by the Cadence booth and...(read more)




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hiCreateAppForm with scrollbars and attachmentList

Hello,

I have created an appForm with  the following attachmentList and size:

?attachmentList list(hicLeftPositionSet | hicRightPositionSet ; field 1
                     hicLeftPositionSet | hicRightPositionSet ; field 2
etc.

?initialSize    800:800
?minSize        800:800
?maxSize       1600:800

If I reduce the minimum y-size (?minSize        800:200), scrollbars are not inserted, unless I remove the attachmentList constraints.

Is it possible to have both scrollbars and "hicLeftPositionSet | hicRightPositionSet"? 

Thank you,

Best regards,

Aldo




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Displaying contents of a modeless dialog box during execution of a SKILL script

I have a modeless informational dialog box defined at the beginning of a SKILL script, but its contents don't display until the script finishes.

How do you get a modeless dialog box contents to display while a SKILL script is running?

procedure(myproc()

   prog((myvars)

     hiDisplayAppDBox()    ; opens blank dialog box - no dboxText contents show until script completes!

     ....rest of SKILL code in script...launches child processes

   );prog

);proc




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Create the title & frame for view schematic

Hi all,

I want to write a script SKILL to create the title & frame for view schematic. My question is whether SKILL supports any function for me to do this.

Best regards,

Huy Hoang




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BoardSurfers: Allegro In-Design Impedance Analysis: Screen your Routed Design Quickly

Have you ever manufactured a printed circuit board (PCB) without analyzing all the routed signal traces? Most designers will say “yes, all the time.” Trace widths and spacing are set by constraints,...

[[ Click on the title to access the full blog on the Cadence Community site. ]]




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BoardSurfers: Training Insights: Creating Custom Reports using ‘Extract’

You must deal with many reports in your daily life – for your health, financial accounts, credit, your child’s academic records, and the count goes on. Ever noticed that these reports contain many details, most of which you don’t wa...(read more)



  • Allegro PCB Editor

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BoardSurfers: Creating Footprints Using Templates in Library Creator

With ECAD-MCAD Library Creator, you can easily create footprints for your parts using thousands of ready-to-use templates that are provided with the tool.(read more)




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BoardSurfers: Footprints for Silicon - Two Steps to Creating PCB Footprints

Longfellow's metaphorical footprints on the sands of time is more profound and eternal no doubt but a footprint for silicon (a form of sand isn't it?) is as important for PCB designers. So, here we will list the steps to create a fo...(read more)



  • Allegro PCB Editor

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BoardSurfers: Five Easy Steps to Create Footprints Using Packages in Library Creator

In my previous blog, I talked about creating a footprint using an existing template in Allegro ECAD-MCAD Library Creator and explained how easily you can access an existing template and create a package from it by just clicking a button. In this blog...(read more)




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BoardSurfers: Allegro In-Design Impedance Analysis: Screen your Routed Design Quickly

Have you ever manufactured a printed circuit board (PCB) without analyzing all the routed signal traces? Most designers will say “yes, all the time.” Trace widths and spacing are set by constraints, and many designers simply don’t h...(read more)




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ST Microelectronics Success with IEEE 1801 / UPF Incisive Simulation - Video

ST Microelectronics reported their success with IEEE 1801 / UPF low-power simulation using Incisive Enterprise Simulator at CDNLive India in November 2013. We were able to meet with Mohit Jain just after his presentation and recorded this video that explains the key points in his paper.

With eight years of experience and pioneering technology in native low-power simulation, Mohit was able to apply Incisive Enterprise Simulator to a low-power demonstrator in preparation for use with a production set-top box chip.  Mohit was impressed with the ease in which he was able to reuse his existing IEEE 1801 / UPF code successfully, including the power format files and the macro models coded in his Liberty files. Mohit also discusses how he used the power-aware Cadence SimVision debugger.

The Cadence low-power verification solution for IEEE 1801 / UPF also incorporates the patent-pending Power Supply Network visualization in the SimVision debugger.  You can learn more about that in the Incisive low-power verification Rapid Adoption Kit for IEEE 1801 / UPF here in Cadence Online Support.

Just another happy Cadence low-power verification user!

Regards,

 Adam "The Jouler" Sherer 




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How to install PLL Macro Model Wizard?

Hello,

I am using virtuoso version IC 6.1.7-64b.500.1, and I am trying to follow the Spectre RF Workshop-Noise-Aware PLL Design Flow(MMSIM 7.1.1) pdf.

I could find the workshop library "pllMMLib", but I cannot find PLL Macro Model Wizard, and I attached my screen.

Could you please help me install the module "PLL Macro Model Wizard"?

Thanks a lot!




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Equivalent skill for Create Detail

Hi Guys,

Anyone know equivalent skill for create detail.

Eugene