TRACK A: Hardware & Systems: Will your Next AI Processor Design Itself? Real-World Case Studies in Autonomous Design | Kisaco Research

Approximately one year ago, Samsung confirmed the world’s first use of AI to design a mobile processor chip. Since then, AI-driven design has been adopted across the industry at a phenomenal pace, accelerating silicon innovations to market in automotive, high-performance computing, consumer electronics, and other applications. Will this pace of innovation ultimately lead to self-designed silicon? In this sequel to the Day-1 Keynote  Enter the Era of Autonomous Design: Personalizing Chips for 1,000X More Powerful AI Compute, we will be looking at real-world examples of using AI to design chips, and reporting on the industry’s path to autonomous design.

Session Topics: 
Chip Design
Novel AI Hardware
Sponsor(s): 
Synopsys
Speaker(s): 

Author:

Stelios Diamantidis

Senior Director & Head of Autonomous Design Solutions
Synopsys

Stelios heads Synopsys' AI Solutions team in the Office of the President, where he researches and applies innovative machine-learning technology to address systemic complexity in the design and manufacturing of integrated computational systems. In 2020, Stelios launched DSO.ai™, the world’s first autonomous AI application for chip design. He has more than 20 years of experience in chip design and EDA software and has founded two companies in this space. Stelios holds an M.S. Electrical Engineering from Stanford University, California.

 

Stelios Diamantidis

Senior Director & Head of Autonomous Design Solutions
Synopsys

Stelios heads Synopsys' AI Solutions team in the Office of the President, where he researches and applies innovative machine-learning technology to address systemic complexity in the design and manufacturing of integrated computational systems. In 2020, Stelios launched DSO.ai™, the world’s first autonomous AI application for chip design. He has more than 20 years of experience in chip design and EDA software and has founded two companies in this space. Stelios holds an M.S. Electrical Engineering from Stanford University, California.