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Message
From: ministryseannigel at yahoo.com<ministryseannigel@y...>
Date: Wed Sep 14 19:44:59 CEST 2005
Subject: [oc] any help needed?
hi. i'm working on an AI chip that could be implemented in FPGA. it is based in part on work by Rodney Brooks of MIT Mobile Robotics Lab. and in part on my own ideas. mail me for more info.
ministry
----- Original Message ----- From: stuart_hoad at hotmail.com<stuart_hoad@h...> To: Date: Thu Sep 8 11:11:46 CEST 2005 Subject: [oc] any help needed?
> Hi, > I'm a digital ASIC designer in the UK with a few spare cycles and > was > wondering if anyone needed any help with an ongoing or new project > (I > apologise if the cores forum is not quite the right one for this, > if not can > you point me in the right direction). > I am currently working for a company doing some way-out-there > mostly back-end stuff, so would kind of like to maintain/enhance my > front-end design skills. > I've checked out the list of projects (I've often considered some > of > them for commercial designs over the past few years), but most seem > to be at a pretty advanced or complete stage so I'm not sure I can > contribute much there. > I have a few ideas for a processor project of my own, but I'm not > going > to be at a point to really start developing it for a few months yet > - > more on this later :-) > Here's a quick 'resume' so you can determine if I'm any use to you! > Digital ASIC Design Engineer (Chartered Engineer) > Most of my experience in VHDL, with a little Verilog (but could do > with > some practice on the verilog side!) > Experienced with all sorts of digital ASIC/FPGA design tools > (ModelSim, > Cadence, Synopsys, Xilinx, etc). > Lead designer (digital) for several commercial designs, including a > new > CPU design amongst others. Most of the recent stuff I've worked on > has > been v. low power/cost designs > I have access to a range of commercial design tools (within reason > of > not interfering with my companys business!) > Have studied and have a lot of interest in high performance > and 'different' processor/DSP architectures. > Not really a softy, but have a bit of previous there, so can hack > out > some assembler code, perl or C/C++ if pushed! > Chief pedant when it comes to design strategy/docs! :-) > If I can be of any assistance, let me know. > Stuart. > >
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