Phil Kaufman Award
The Phil Kaufman Award for Distinguished Contributions to EDA honors individuals for their impact on electronic design by their contributions to electronic design automation (EDA).[1][2] It was established in 1994 by the EDA Consortium (now the Electronic System Design Alliance, a SEMI Technology Community). The IEEE Council on Electronic Design Automation (CEDA) became a co-sponsor of the award.[2] The first Phil Kaufman Award was presented in 1994.[3]
The IEEE has a policy not to issue awards to deceased persons.[3] To honor individuals who made a significant impact on EDA, but died before the award was established the Phil Kaufman Hall of Fame was created by the ESDA in 2020. The first Hall of Fame honor was presented in June 2021.[1][3] Phil Kaufman awardees are included in the Phil Kaufman Hall of Fame.[2]
Contributions to qualify for the Phil Kaufman Award are evaluated in any of the following categories:[1][2]
- Business
- Industry Direction and Promotion
- Technology and Engineering
- Educational and Mentoring
The award was established to honor Phil Kaufman, the deceased former president of Quickturn Systems.[1][2]
The award is described as the "Nobel Prize of EDA".[4][5][6]
Recipients
[edit]All recipients are listed at the ESDA Phil Kaufman Award webpage.[7]
- 1994 – Hermann Gummel[7]
- 1995 – Donald Pederson[7]
- 1996 – Carver Mead[7]
- 1997 – James Solomon[7]
- 1998 – Ernest S. Kuh[7]
- 1999 – Hugo De Man, known for his contributions in creating and driving the development of design automation tools that have had measurable impact on the productivity of electronic design engineers.[8]
- 2000 – Paul (Yen-Son) Huang[7]
- 2001 – Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli[7]
- 2002 – Ronald A. Rohrer, electronic industry pioneer, entrepreneur, researcher and educator, who head led a students' circuit simulator projects, which had eventually led to the development of SPICE. [9]
- 2003 – A. Richard Newton[7]
- 2004 – Joseph Costello[7]
- 2005 – Phil Moorby, inventor of Verilog[7]
- 2006 – Robert Dutton, creator of SUPREM (Stanford University Process Engineering Models) and PISCES (Poisson and Continuity Equation Solver) simulation tools and software used in Technology Computer Aided Design.
- 2007 – Robert K. Brayton, known for work in logic synthesis, formal verification and formal equivalence checking. Co-developer of Espresso.
- 2008 – Aart de Geus, Synopsys CEO for contributions to the EDA industry, more specifically the Design Compiler tool.
- 2009 – Randal Bryant, CMU professor, for his seminal technological breakthroughs in the area of formal verification.
- 2010 – Pat Pistilli, for pioneering the EDA industry and building the Design Automation Conference as its premiere showcase and networking platform
- 2011 – Chung Laung Liu, for his Distinguished Technical Contributions, Leadership Skills, and Business Acumen in Electronic Design Automation.
- 2013 – Chenming Hu, for major contributions to transistor modeling enabling the generation of FinFET based design.
- 2014 – Lucio Lanza, for helping numerous startups to develop innovative technologies.
- 2015 – Walden C. Rhines, CEO of Mentor Graphics, for his efforts growing the EDA and IC design industries.
- 2016 – Andrzej Strojwas, CMU professor and chief technologist of PDF Solutions, for his research in the area of design for manufacturing in the semiconductor industry.
- 2017 – Rob Rutenbar, for his contributions to algorithms and tools for analog and mixed-signal designs. [10]
- 2018 – Thomas Williams, for his outstanding contributions to test automation and his overall impact on the electronics industry.[11]
- 2019 – Mary Jane Irwin, Pennsylvania State University, for her extensive contributions to EDA and the community.[12]
- 2020 – Hiatus due to COVID-19 pandemic[13]
- 2021 – Anirudh Devgan, Cadence Design Systems CEO for Distinguished Contributions to Electronic System Design.[14]
- 2022 – Giovanni De Micheli, for his significant impact on the electronic system design industry through pioneering technical contributions. [15]
- 2023 - Lawrence Pileggi, "for his pioneering contributions to circuit simulation and optimization. These advances have enabled the electronics system design industry to address the challenge of interconnect delay dominated designs."[16]
- 2024 - Jason Cong, for fundamental contributions to FPGA design automation technology[17]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "ESD Alliance Phil Kaufman Award | SEMI".
- ^ a b c d e "Phil Kaufman Award for Distinguished Contributions to EDA".
- ^ a b c "Phil Kaufman—Hall of Fame | SEMI".
- ^ EDA puts out call for design award nominees, Silicon Valley Business Journal, June 20, 2007
- ^ Rutenbar wins ‘Nobel Prize’ of Electronic Design Automation, November 15, 2017
- ^ Quaffing a beer with The Father of EDA, Electronic Design News, May 11, 2011
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Phil Kaufman Award – ESD Alliance". esd-alliance.org. Retrieved 2018-10-07.
- ^ "1999 Phil Kaufman Award – ESD Alliance". esd-alliance.org. Retrieved 2020-09-11.
- ^ "2002 Phil Kaufman Award – ESD Alliance". esd-alliance.org. Retrieved 2020-09-11.
- ^ "2017 Phil Kaufman Award Dinner – ESD Alliance". esd-alliance.org. Retrieved 2018-10-07.
- ^ "2018 Phil Kaufman Award – ESD Alliance". esd-alliance.org. Retrieved 2018-10-07.
- ^ "2019 Phil Kaufman Award – ESD Alliance". esd-alliance.org. Retrieved 2020-09-11.
- ^ "Notice regarding the 2020 Phil Kaufman Award" (PDF).
- ^ "Dr. Anirudh Devgan Honored With 2021 Phil Kaufman Award | SEMI". Archived from the original on 2021-12-16.
- ^ "Phil Kaufman Award for Distinguished Contributions to EDA". IEEE CEDA. Retrieved September 2, 2023.
- ^ "2023 Phil Kaufman Award & Dinner | IEEE CEDA". ieee-ceda.org.
- ^ "2024 Phil Kaufman Award Recipient Dr. Jason Cong | IEEE CEDA". ieee-ceda.org.