Preprint of paper published in:
Proceedings of the International Conference on Computer Design
(ICCD 96)
in conjunction with an embedded tutorial session of the same title
Many embedded systems have substantially different design constraints than desktop computing applications. No single characterization applies to the diverse spectrum of embedded systems. However, some combination of cost pressure, long life-cycle, real-time requirements, reliability requirements, and design culture dysfunction can make it difficult to be successful applying traditional computer design methodologies and tools to embedded applications. Embedded systems in many cases must be optimized for life-cycle and business-driven factors rather than for maximum computing throughput. There is currently little tool support for expanding embedded computer design to the scope of holistic embedded system design. However, knowing the strengths and weaknesses of current approaches can set expectations appropriately, identify risk areas to tool adopters, and suggest ways in which tool builders can meet industrial needs.
HTML paper (80KB)
Adobe Acrobat paper (95 KB)
Postscript paper (425KB)
Phil Koopman -- koopman@cmu.edu