Screeching Halt

by Jim Venable 25. August 2010 07:05

 

 

If you live in the San Francisco Bay Area chances are you have to commute to work especially if you are like me and live in the "City" and work "down on the peninsula" in Sunnyvale about 50 miles away. Now, normally I travel the wide open I280 where you can pretty much go as fast as you want so the driving time to my work isn’t all that bad. I can usually make it in less than an hour.

The other day I had the occasion to go home from work using US101, the main street of Silicon Valley, which runs parallel to I280 but about five miles further inland. It was early afternoon so there wasn’t the usual bumper-to-bumper traffic which is usually why I don’t take it. For the past couple of years the California department for highways, Cal Trans, has been upgrading 101 and repaving it, among other improvements. It has been quite some time since I last traveled 101 from the Valley and was admiring the nice new smooth freeway surface. As I was making my way toward San Francisco I noticed something that was quite disturbing. This freshly resurfaced roadway was inundated with tire skid marks and scrapped paint marks on barriers. They were all over everywhere. The road looked like the landing point on the runway at SFO except here the skid marks were swerving in all different directions. You could just see where people suddenly realized they were going to hit someone in front of them and in a panic, slammed their foot on the brakes, cut the steering wheel sharply right or left. Almost always there was an abrupt stoppage of the tire marks; a definite smudge at impact. They either hit the center divider or whoever was ahead of them. I used to travel this road a lot and I never noticed such a multitude of skid and impact marks before so I was wondering what was going on when I got the familiar ping on my iPhone signifying an incoming email. I instinctively pickup up the phone and glanced down to see the message and like a lightning bolt striking, I knew why there were so many skid marks.

People, it will ruin your day and the day of the other person(s) ahead of you that you crash into for the instance it takes to look away at an email or, God forbid, send a text message while you are driving a vehicle. So STOP IT! No matter how important you think you are or how urgently someone needs to reach you, it can wait.

I love mobile devices particularly smartphones and have devoted the past several years my life driving Serial Port Memory Technology into this market to give these great gadgets ever more capabilities. But we simply have to be sane about where we use them. Behind the wheel of a 4000 pound moving mass of metal and plastic isn’t one of them. Enough said.

The Time for SPMT is Now!

by Jim Venable 29. July 2010 19:30

 

 

The last couple of days have been awesome for the SPMT consortium. We held an event in conjunction with IEEE at the Marvell headquarters in Santa Clara California. We were given the opportunity to present the technology and hold a panel discussion taking question from about 100 engineers from around the Bay Area. The panel consisted of Jim Elliott, VP of marketing and product planning from Samsung, Camillo Martino, CEO of Silicon Image, Dr. Sehat Sutardja, CEO, President of Marvell, Arun Kamat, VP of marketing for Hynix, Dr. John Heinlein, VP of Marketing and Physical IP Division, and myself. After remarks from Dr. Sutardja and me, we went into the panel discussion with a lot of interesting and probing questions from the audience. The panel was followed by some great food and good conversation all around. Great event and great exposure for Serial Port Memory Technology.

Yesterday, the SPMT Consortium participated in the Memcon technical conference focused on the future of memory technology. It was an intensive one day program packed with a lot of great presentations and information. Alan Ruberg, SPMT Architect, presented the SPMT architecture that was very well received by a packed conference room. SPMT also had an exhibit there where the team was mobbed by engineers eager to learn more about SPMT. Later in the day I participated in a panel to discuss the future of memory interfaces where I predicted that a serial (SPMT) interface will become the next major general purpose standard for DRAM. Both the mobile and consumer electronics industry have recognized that the current parallel interface architecture is hitting the wall and serial is inevitable.

The momentum for SPMT has significantly picked up in the last couple of months as other proposed memory interface alternatives have fallen to the wayside because they simply cannot match the combination of low power, high bandwidth, low latency, and low pin count that SPMT offers. To quote the Dr. Sutardja, "The time for SPMT is now!"

 

Ahhh.... Barcelona!! Oh yeah, GSMA too

by Jim Venable 26. February 2010 00:27

 

 

Back from Barcelona where I attended the GSMA Mobile World Congress -- the annual confab for everything cell-phone related. What a great place to have a conference and exhibition. Barcelona is my second most favorite city in the world, second only to Paris. In a lot of ways it is much like Paris; great culture, unique architecture, fabulous food and wonderful people. Ok, maybe that last one I’ll give to Barcelona.

As expected, everyone was present and accounted for at GSMA. Well, everyone except Apple and Nokia. I didn’t expect Apple to be there, but Nokia? What’s up with that?

But, everyone else was certainly there. Here’s some of the coolest phones I saw: Sony Ericsson showed their Xperia™ X10 smartphone. It was really nice and certainly rivals the iPhone in look and feel. The user interface was extremely slick with floating images and pictures, definitely a cut above the current Apple offering. Samsung showed a new AMOLED touch screen that is awesome. It was very bright and easy to see in all lighting conditions; something that is a bit lacking with the iPhone. Samsung’s Bada platform for application development was, indeed, bad – as in very cool! There were a number of independent application developers there all showing their products on the new Samsung Wave smartphone. Transitioning between apps was extremely smooth and seamless. While the applications themselves may be unique, the usability and user interface was consistent across all of them. There’s also on-the-fly editing of widgets which was pretty neat.

HTC had a huge presence. This is the company that used to make phones for others to brand. Now, they are branding their own phones. When you look across their lineup, you can recognize who they may have designed phones for in the past. For years, they have focused on hardware because that’s what they were paid to do. Now they need to catch up on the software side and the user experience, if they want to be a player.

Motorola was all about their Blur environment. They had some good phones, but they were really pushing their Blur technology, i.e. cloud computing. Blur is an environment that organizes all the social media sites you may belong to: Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, etc. as well as all the contacts from across all your various email and contact programs. Let me stress -- ALL. It seems that when you buy a Motorola phone like the Cliq and start it up, it prompts you to open a Blur account. When you do, it will search everything and create contact info for anyone you know, whether you like it or not. Apparently, there’s no way to be selective about who you want be in contact with. Again, this is across all social sites as well as your email accounts. (Sounds like an oops to me.) All of this information is stored on their servers at their sites (in the "Cloud"). Not that I have anything to hide or that I’m paranoid, but this just seems a little exposed to me. However, I got the distinct feeling that they were really targeting a different demographic to which I don’t belong, one which doesn’t really think about things like privacy or government "oversight." Like the sub-30 crowd?

One notable bright spot and I can’t believe I’m saying this, was Microsoft and their Windows Phone 7 OS demonstration. WOW! Very impressive. With this OS, you can actually turn your smartphone into a virtual laptop, including full-throttle Windows Office applications. They definitely upped the ante with this one. Windows Mobile is now just a bad memory.

For me, the biggest takeaway from this year’s GSMA was that the hardware is becoming homogenized. Most handset manufacturers have moved toward the iPhone style form factor. Sure, some might have square corners verses rounded corners but when you do a little measuring they are all mostly the same: about the same physical dimensions, a button at the center on the bottom, a touch screen, swooshing to navigate. Really, it would be very difficult to tell which phone came from which company. The differentiation is going to be ultimately in the software; the kind of apps offered and how intuitive the user interface is. I think Google may have figured this out before anyone else did. And by the way, Android-based phones were everywhere.

The PC industry went down this very same path. Early on, you could tell an IBM PC from a Compaq PC pretty easily. But after a few years, ok maybe a decade, all PCs looked pretty much the same (not talking about Apple). It was very difficult for the PC manufacturers to differentiate themselves based on the hardware. I see the same thing happening to the cell phone market. It will basically come down to what kind of processing power you have, battery life and the user experience the service providers want to sell you. Form factor will be less of an issue. Smartphones will all have touch screens and they are all moving to the largest LCD form factor that fits in your pocket. Granted, the feature phone and low-end phones have a little more variations in form factor than the smartphone, but smartphones are the fastest growing segment. And based on what I heard from industry executives at GSMA, I’m pretty sure that the smartphone feature set as we see it today will certainly migrate to the midrange and will eventually become standard at the lower end of the market. This will leave the upper end to innovate with cool new features mostly based on application innovation.

So we’re back to, "It’s the software, stupid!"

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About the author

Jim Venable is a 25 year veteran of the semiconductor and semiconductor IP industry. In the early years he participated in the formation of what became known as the Electronic Design Automation (EDA) industry by working on one of the very first commercially available circuit simulation and schematic capture programs. He later forged alliances with industry leaders to bring to market a new CPU architecture and was instrumental in driving the PowerPC architecture into the market. He continued his alliance efforts by forming an industry-first third party program for tools to design products with new CPU architectures.  More recently, Mr. Venable has been forming relationships between industry giants to develop and support a new memory interface architecture initially targeted at the mobile market segment. These companies came together to form a new consortium chartered with making Serial Port Memory Technology an open industry standard enabling a new generation of mobile devices. Mr. Venable was appointed president of SPMT, LLC the entity responsible for managing the licensing, promotion, and administration of the SPMT specification.

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