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IBM sets new standard for custom chip designsCisco Systems expected to be the first to use East Fishkill - June 10, 2002 - IBM today announced the industry's most advanced custom chip capability. The new IBM application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) offering, called Cu-08, supports circuits as small as 90 nanometers (a nanometer is a billionth of a meter), as well as innovative materials and design techniques to drive power consumption down by as much as 40 percent while pushing performance up as much as 20 percent. "IBM understands that customers don't just want new technology; they want a supplier with the experience and resources to help them use it," said Michel Mayer, general manager, IBM Microelectronics Division. "It's going to take more than just smaller geometries. It's going to take technologies like copper and low-k; design innovations like embedded DRAM and low-power transistors; and knowledge of the customer's business and applications to best apply them all." Cisco Systems, the worldwide leader in networking for the Internet, is one of IBM's ASIC customers and is expected to be the first to use this new technology in the development of its next-generation products. With IBM's earlier generation of ASIC technology, called Cu-11, the company worked with Cisco to implement a single chip supporting more than 35 million "gates," or basic logic circuits, believed to be the world's most complex ASIC to date. As with the previous ASIC technology, Cisco plans to work with IBM to develop new custom chips that take advantage of the reduced power consumption and increased performance this new process affords. "With each progressive iteration of IBM's chip-building process, Cisco has been able to take advantage of the company's ability to deliver ever smaller, ever faster, higher functionality ASICs," said Tony Bates, vice president and general manager, IP POP Systems Group, Cisco Systems. "Integrating this type of leading edge technology into our high-end networking products helps us to deliver solutions based on evolving customer needs, including faster transport and protocol integration services as well as meeting the challenge of increasing performance while decreasing product size and footprints." Cu-08 supports up to eight layers of copper wiring, separated by an advanced "low-k dielectric" insulation, linking hundreds of millions of transistors to form up to 72 million wireable gates -- all on a single chip. Cu-08 can be used to create complete system-on-a-chip designs, where elements such as processors, memory and analog functions all are combined on one piece of silicon. Cu-08 also introduces several innovations to accelerate this integration of functions, including:
Today, Cu-11 and SA-27E support mid-range mobile, home networking and gaming applications and Cu-08 will be extendable into these areas as well. All these ASIC design systems leverage IBM's production-proven Blue Logic methodology and are expected to strengthen IBM's position as a worldwide ASIC supplier. According to the latest figures from Gartner Dataquest, IBM was the number one worldwide ASIC vendor in 2001. A design kit, allowing customers to begin developing chips based on Cu-08, is planned to be made available in the third quarter of this year.
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