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eFPGA LUTs Will Outship FPGA LUTs Later This DecadeBy Geoff Tate, CEO of Flex Logix FPGAs have become a strategic technology. It used to be a “poor man’s ASIC” and provided a customized IC for lower-volume applications. While it is still used this way in many systems, it has also become strategically important to two very big, high-growth applications:
In fact, FPGAs are so strategic for the data center that it caused Intel to buy Altera and more recently AMD to buy Xilinx. This is because processor workloads in many cases are shifting to FPGAs. Data centers use FPGAs in volume to provide the parallel programmability a processor cannot achieve (one customer calls it “programmability at the speed of hardware”). These FPGAs are paired with dedicated function ICs such as NICs (network interface chips) and network switch chips. Each data center has different workloads and needs so a standard product for all doesn’t work, and each data center has the volumes and capital to optimize for their needs. Communications systems have long used FPGAs to handle hundreds of national frequency bands and protocols. Now with 5G, FPGAs are used to manage the complexity and evolving standards such as O-RAN. While FPGA programmability is very valuable as described above, the power and size of FPGAs is another story. As a result, today data center and communication companies want to integrate their FPGAs into SoCs to reduce size and power.
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