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by taway32r41
1014 days ago
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Here's a class at MIT that takes undergraduates who don't even know verilog and at then end of the class they have a mostly passable RV32I. Admittedly pushing that through VLSI CAD will not be push-button easy but many universities also have an undergraduate tape-out class, including MIT... https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/6-004-computation-structures-spr... Via MPW and assembly service one can easily have that die manufactured, packaged and mounted on custom PCBs for under $50K, a.k.a. much less than you'll pay in salary to have it designed, fabricated and tested. Even at non-American labor rates. In 2023 producing a computing core, albeit not a state-of-the-art one, is just not the moat it once was... |
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I'm not saying "building a RV32x is impossible," I'm saying there are people with existing tool-chains that favour Verilog or SystemVerilog (or even VHDL, though I don't know of them personally.) And telling them "no, you should use Scala / Chisel / Firrtl to model the features you want to add to the system in order to meet customer requirements" is kind of a hard sell for many customers.