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Computers are everywhere around us. We, for example, as air passengers, car drivers, laptop users with Internet connection, cell phone owners, hospital patients, inhabitants in the vicinity of a nuclear power station, students in a digital library or customers in a supermarket are dependent on their correct operation. Computers are incredibly fast, inexpensive and equipped with almost unimag- able large storage capacity. Up to 100 million transistors per chip are quite common today - a single transistor for each citizen of a large capital city in the world can be 2 easily accommodated on an ordinary chip. The size of such a chip is less than 1 cm . This is a fantastic achievement for an unbe...
The idea of creating the European Dependable Computing Conference (EDCC) was born at the moment when the Iron Curtain fell. A group of enthusiasts, who were pre viously involved in research and teaching in the ?eld of fault tolerant computing in different European countries, agreed that there is no longer any point in keeping pre viously independent activities apart and created a steering committee which took the responsibility for preparing the EDCC calendar and appointing the chairs for the in dividual conferences. There is no single European or global professional organization that took over the responsibility for this conference, but there are three national in terest groups that sent de...
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The theme of the April 1999 symposium Scaling deeper to submicron: test technology challenges reflects the issues being created by the move toward nanometer technologies. Many creative and novel ideas and approaches to the current and future electronic circuit testing-related problems are explored
Collects 58 papers from the April/May 2001 symposium that explore new approaches in the testing of electronic circuits and systems. Key areas in testing are discussed, such as BIST, analog measurement, fault tolerance, diagnosis methods, scan chain design, memory test and diagnosis, and test data compression and compaction. Also on the program are sessions on emerging areas that are gaining prominence, including low power testing, testing high speed circuits on low cost testers, processor based self test techniques, and core- based system-on-chip testing. Some of the topics are robust and low cost BIST architectures for sequential fault testing in datapath multipliers, a method for measuring the cycle-to-cycle period jitter of high-frequency clock signals, fault equivalence identification using redundancy information and static and dynamic extraction, and test scheduling for minimal energy consumption under power constraints. No subject index. c. Book News Inc.
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Proceedings of a spring 2000 symposium, highlighting novel ideas and approaches to current and future problems related to testing of electronic circuits and systems. Themes are microprocessor test/validation, low power BIST and scan, technology trends, scan- related approaches, defect-driven techniques, and system-on-chip test techniques. Other subjects are analog test techniques, temperature and process drift issues, test compaction and design validation, analog BIST, and functional test and verification issues. Also covered are STIL extension, IDDQ test, and on-line testing and fault tolerance. Lacks a subject index. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.