SAN MATEO, Calif. — A major upgrade of Xilinx Inc.'s Integrated Software Environment FPGA design tool package features new system-level design capabilities, improved performance and new utilities to ...
San Jose, Calif. – Xilinx Inc. said Version 6.2i of its integrated software environment (ISE) for FPGA design taps optimizations that deliver a 40 percent performance boost in Virtex-II Pro FPGAs.
As data centers are called upon to handle an explosion of unstructured data fed into a variety of cutting-edge applications, the future for FPGAs looks bright. That’s because FPGAs, or field ...
Free, on-chip, 2-D statistical eyescan software enables fast in-system verification of high-speed data converter-to-FPGA signal integrity. Download the reference ...
Accelize, a global SaaS provider, today announced its distribution platform for FPGA-accelerated software is optimized for video streaming workloads deployed on the Xilinx Real-Time Video Server ...
Every new hardware device that offers some kind of benefit compared to legacy devices faces the task of overcoming the immense inertia that is imparted to a platform by the software that runs upon it.
The field programmable gate space is heating up with new use cases driven by everything from emerging network, IoT, and application acceleration trends. Keeping ahead of the curve means expanding on ...
(This post was corrected at 6pm CDT on 10/16/2018 to reflect NVIDIA's membership in ONNX.) In addition, Xilinx announced its new “Versal” advanced computing acceleration platform (ACAP) architecture, ...
ISE 9.1i powered by new SmartCompile technology cuts implementation runtimes by up to 6X and delivers 30% faster performance SAN JOSE, Calif., January 15, 2007 – Xilinx, Inc. (NASDAQ: XLNX) today ...
A field programmable gate array (FPGA) is a user-programmable piece of silicon constructed in very large-scale integration (VLSI) technology. The VLSI transistor-level detail is absolutely predefined ...
Chipmaker Xilinx is betting its new Everest design will accelerate today's computing chores -- and appeal to programmers, not just hardware nerds. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 ...