While sipping on my revive-me-from-the-dead coffee this morning, I had a scan of JL's latest post on the ongoing VMM/OVM spat. This pointed me at an article by Richard Goering in SCDSource which had the following:
Bartleson said, however, that Synopsys has no intent to support OVM. "Our goal is to support the Accellera [VIP] standard, so we get some unification. For us to support OVM would mean more confusion in the industry."
<splutter>Oh crap, I’m choking on hot coffee now.
“Confusion in the industry”. What? Are we really going to get confused because we have two methodologies for writing testbenches? I hope not, because anyone who is confused is going to be a real public danger driving home from work tonight.
My experience of the IC industry is that it’s populated by a large number of very intelligent people, and as such, a prerequisite of being involved in ASIC design (or the human race for that matter) is surely the ability to understand and differentiate between two similar things?
I seriously wonder how Synopsys view us all if they think two things will confuse us. Perhaps two things confuse them? Anyway, the whole “we must only have one methodology” cat fight reminded me of this blog which I was reading a few nights ago:
“Ruby on Rails has pretty much nuked the field of Web development in Ruby, and I wonder if it's such a good thing. For all the flak that Java receives because you can count at least a dozen different Web frameworks, there is something to be said about plurality and the constant chase for something better and different. Each framework that comes out builds on the strengths of its ancestors while discarding the errors (and committing a few mistakes of its own, of course). The field advances a little bit every time while bowing down to the timeless laws of natural selection.
I am worried that Ruby on Rails will do to the Ruby world what JUnit did to Java: a great tool when it came out but which condemned its community to an ice age where no innovation or competition appeared for years. Whatever the fate of Ruby, I hope its fans will keep an open mind and will constantly challenge the Rails way, for the simple reason that it's always healthy to question what's in place, no matter how good it looks.”
I couldn't agree more. Anyway, I’m going to finish my coffee, and wait for the next installment of “VMM vs. OVM – Handbags at Dawn”.
Are *you* confused?
While sipping on my revive-me-from-the-dead coffee this morning, I had a scan of JL's latest post on the ongoing VMM/OVM spat. This pointed me at an article by Richard Goering in SCDSource which had the following:
<splutter>Oh crap, I’m choking on hot coffee now.
“Confusion in the industry”. What? Are we really going to get confused because we have two methodologies for writing testbenches? I hope not, because anyone who is confused is going to be a real public danger driving home from work tonight.
My experience of the IC industry is that it’s populated by a large number of very intelligent people, and as such, a prerequisite of being involved in ASIC design (or the human race for that matter) is surely the ability to understand and differentiate between two similar things?
I seriously wonder how Synopsys view us all if they think two things will confuse us. Perhaps two things confuse them?
Anyway, the whole “we must only have one methodology” cat fight reminded me of this blog which I was reading a few nights ago:
I am worried that Ruby on Rails will do to the Ruby world what JUnit did to Java: a great tool when it came out but which condemned its community to an ice age where no innovation or competition appeared for years. Whatever the fate of Ruby, I hope its fans will keep an open mind and will constantly challenge the Rails way, for the simple reason that it's always healthy to question what's in place, no matter how good it looks.”
I couldn't agree more. Anyway, I’m going to finish my coffee, and wait for the next installment of “VMM vs. OVM – Handbags at Dawn”.