Much has been said and written about the changes in analog IC technology such as shrinking line widths, vanishingly low supply voltages, severe power limitations, and digital noise. But beyond these technology changes and their subsequent methodology changes, a far more subtle revolution is happening in the nature of the profession itself. Technology, software, and product evolution have all conspired to create a new kind of analog IC designer, one very different from the IC designers of the past.
The copyright of the original papers published on this site belongs to IEICE. Unauthorized use of the original or translated papers is prohibited. See IEICE Provisions on Copyright for details.
Copy
Christopher W. MANGELSDORF, "The Changing Face of Analog IC Design" in IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Fundamentals,
vol. E85-A, no. 2, pp. 282-285, February 2002, doi: .
Abstract: Much has been said and written about the changes in analog IC technology such as shrinking line widths, vanishingly low supply voltages, severe power limitations, and digital noise. But beyond these technology changes and their subsequent methodology changes, a far more subtle revolution is happening in the nature of the profession itself. Technology, software, and product evolution have all conspired to create a new kind of analog IC designer, one very different from the IC designers of the past.
URL: https://global.ieice.org/en_transactions/fundamentals/10.1587/e85-a_2_282/_p
Copy
@ARTICLE{e85-a_2_282,
author={Christopher W. MANGELSDORF, },
journal={IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Fundamentals},
title={The Changing Face of Analog IC Design},
year={2002},
volume={E85-A},
number={2},
pages={282-285},
abstract={Much has been said and written about the changes in analog IC technology such as shrinking line widths, vanishingly low supply voltages, severe power limitations, and digital noise. But beyond these technology changes and their subsequent methodology changes, a far more subtle revolution is happening in the nature of the profession itself. Technology, software, and product evolution have all conspired to create a new kind of analog IC designer, one very different from the IC designers of the past.},
keywords={},
doi={},
ISSN={},
month={February},}
Copy
TY - JOUR
TI - The Changing Face of Analog IC Design
T2 - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Fundamentals
SP - 282
EP - 285
AU - Christopher W. MANGELSDORF
PY - 2002
DO -
JO - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Fundamentals
SN -
VL - E85-A
IS - 2
JA - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Fundamentals
Y1 - February 2002
AB - Much has been said and written about the changes in analog IC technology such as shrinking line widths, vanishingly low supply voltages, severe power limitations, and digital noise. But beyond these technology changes and their subsequent methodology changes, a far more subtle revolution is happening in the nature of the profession itself. Technology, software, and product evolution have all conspired to create a new kind of analog IC designer, one very different from the IC designers of the past.
ER -