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ua709

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Meta Employees Are Scrambling to Use Up Benefits Ahead of Layoffs

wired.com
10 points·by ua709·2 ay önce·1 comments

Parent sues Palo Alto Unified after son is accused of using AI on essay

paloaltoonline.com
3 points·by ua709·2 ay önce·1 comments

Software Engineering Has Been Commoditized and Automated. What's Next?

eetimes.com
2 points·by ua709·4 ay önce·0 comments

Self-contained RTL to GDS flow for simple chip designs

github.com
2 points·by ua709·5 ay önce·0 comments

comments

ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
Fair enough but I don’t work for AMD.
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
> Are you seriously suggesting hobbyists should tapeout an ASIC instead of use an FPGA?

No. I said the low-end of FPGA sales is getting eaten by microcontrollers and the high-end of FPGAs sales is probably about to get eaten by custom ASICs.

Although the cost of making an ASIC is high, in the larger nodes it's not that high, and getting ever cheaper at FPGA performance levels and logic densities. FPGAs are terribly inefficient with their HW they're very easy to beat with an ASIC. They only get away with it because the NRE today is lower. But it's not an order of magnitude lower and I'm not sure how much longer that will be the case in nodes at 28nm and larger based on what I know Universities pay in tape-out classes.

Will there be very low qty projects where the NRE of developing an ASIC overwhelms that of an ASIC, sure. But will there be enough business in that niche to sustain the business of AMD, Intel and Lattice? Not obvious.

And I don't think the FPGA hobbyist market of people who "want to learn HDL" spends enough money to affect what's coming and this decision from AMD reflects that.

> 1. For one-off designs (quantity=1) ASICs will never beat a high end FPGA on unit price.

Never say never. These guys were able to convince investors you're wrong about that. :)

https://atomicsemi.com

P.S. If you're a hobbyist who wants to make an ASIC... https://www.tinytapeout.com
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
Just of out of curiosity, what parts of the University Program don't appeal to you?

https://www.amd.com/en/corporate/university-program.html

You can get free licenses and donated hardware through this program.
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
I don't think AMD can say this but I think the reality is for most hobbyists this is the prevailing attitude:

"The Harsh Truth about FPGAs (You Should Avoid Them?!)" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l3d8uFKsJiY

a.k.a. Just use a microcontroller. And for the vast majority of hobby projects I suspect that is good advice. Low end FPGAs don't compete well with low end microcontrollers and more people know how to use microcontrollers.

Universities are fine as they can sign up for the University Program and get the licensees they used to get. https://www.amd.com/en/corporate/university-program.html

I think the reality is the niche that FPGAs occupied is getting hit hard on the high and low end. Cheap Chinese FPGAs are prevalent, cheap microcontrollers more so, and on the high-end making an ASIC that compete with a high-end FPGA has never been cheaper, and is getting cheaper and easier everyday. 65-28nm is very easy to use now (relatively speaking) and is very low cost with tons of tape outs and there is good competition. Beating an FPGA with an ASIC is not all that hard. Grad students at CMU, Stanford, Georgia Tech, etc. do it all the time in their tape-out class. Making an ASIC is not as easy as an FPGA for sure, especially if you need DDR and serdes. And NRE for ASICs for small volume ( <1K units) is higher. But it is getting easier and cheaper everyday. And it's now feasible for small teams (say ~6) to do it. I think they need to look very hard at where they spend their NRE now to stay relevant and they need to start getting brutal because I am sure the amount of revenue they're bringing in is under serious attack.

As to why Windows and not Linux? It's probably cheaper for them to maintain Windows for one reason or another. Maybe they don't even do it an just contract it out and Windows contractors are easier to find, but I'll bet it's just a basic cost issue at the end of the day.
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
Schools can join the AMD University Program and get back to where they were, and more. https://www.amd.com/en/corporate/university-program.html

As for hobbyists, in the world of $0.03 microcontrollers, strong competition on the low end from Chinese manufacturers, and where few people learn HDLs, is NRE money in the hobby market really money well spent?

I'm a HW designer and even I use microcontrollers now for most things, but not everything, because it's usually cheaper and faster.

With semiconductor prices coming down as far as they have I think the world has probably fundamentally changed for FPGAs and the niche they occupied is shrinking fast.
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
If you have central control you might even be able to get away with changing the rules. i.e. most roads are now one-way leading out of the city. voilà we nearly doubled outbound throughput. Even just for commuting that would be awesome, not that it is happening anytime soon, but one can dream, especially while sitting in gridlock traffic.
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
“ Minnesota House File 1606 would allow survivors to sue the owners of nudification apps for damages “

I have no idea how the law works in this case but if you could prove damages couldn’t you already sue? This is a guess but maybe this law clarifies what is considered damaging which is what enables them to prove damages where under previous definitions they couldn’t?
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
Only 30? Those guys need to get their act together.

https://www.seattletimes.com/business/boeing-aerospace/congr...
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
Thanks! I'm going to give this a shot on a nasty simulation I'm presently working on... :)
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
SOTA = State of the Art? Like say Claude Opus 4.5? I actually want to try this out.
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
> STM32 cubemx starter repo and ask for a feature

I'm confused, isn't the whole point of using the STM32CubeIDE that all the peripherals, like say setting up an ADC on pins 4 and 7, are checkbox features?

https://wiki.st.com/stm32mcu/wiki/Getting_started_with_ADC
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
> use cases related to root causing complex simulation failures.

That's a pretty interesting use case. I assume this is for RTL simulation given the thread, but how do you connect the output of the simulator to the AI?
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
I wonder if that even works. Kinda like when kids play telephone I think it’s unlikely the input and output sentences actually match.
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
Also an “exploratory discussion” is not the same as a signed contract. Apple has tons of custom silicon now. There are many low risk ASICs Apple could kick the tires with.
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
TSMC fabs on home turf is just as good from a security point of view. But in reality for VLSI at this scale and volume it’s just single supplier in series with single supplier all the way down. You don’t really get security with such a vulnerable supply chain, regardless of ownership.
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
> Just print some cash and cancel the debt if the borrowers and creditors are two pockets on the same pants.

With such a great plan what could possibly go wrong?

https://www.reed.edu/economics/parker/f13/201/cases/Argentin...

"Argentina, like many other chronic-inflation economies, went through repeated cycles of hyperinflation followed by attempts at stabilization. A typical cycle in such an inflationary economy begins with acceleration of money creation to accommodate the government's budgetary needs. As inflation accelerates, political pressure to reduce inflation builds, leading to an eventual "monetary reform." Such reforms usually include the introduction of a new currency (which is convenient since inflation has usually moved the nominal prices of goods and services into the thousands, million, billions, or even trillions of units of the old currency) and promises on the part of the government (which is in charge of the budget) and the central bank (which is in charge of issuing money and is often under direct control of the government) to follow rules leading to slower monetary growth in the future."
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
How exactly is exactly? Can I make it measure 1 hour with an allowed tolerance of 55 years, plus or minus. :)
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
Not all code is cheap. Some code remains very expensive.

But the idea that some code is cheap and some code is expensive is not new.

The only new thing is there are some adjustments on how to asses the value of the code you’re presently, or about to, work on.

AI has absolutely expanded the set of code that is cheap and if you can make a thing easily with AI then so can someone else. That project is unlikely to result in valuable code. Which is not to say it doesn’t have utility. Just its monetary value is low.
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
This is one of those news stories that when you read it you think it’s so ridiculous, on so many levels, that it can’t possibly be true. But then I look at the calendar and I’m reminded it’s 2026, which means it probably is true.
ua709
·2 ay önce·discuss
Worse than a void because a void is not necessarily bad. Walking “off a cliff” rarely ends well.