SemiWiki: AI, Safety and Low Power, Compounding Complexity
, 2020年04月28日
AI, Safety and Low Power, Compounding Complexity
April 28th, 2020 – By Bernard Murphy
The nexus of complexity in SoC design these days has to be in automotive ADAS devices. Arteris IP highlighted this in the Linley Processor Conference recently where they talked about an ADAS chip that Toshiba had built. This has multiple vision and AI accelerators, both DSP and DNN-based. It is clearly aiming for ISO 26262 ASIL D certification since the design separates a safety island from the processing island, pretty much the only way you can get to ASIL D in a heterogenous mix of ASIL-level on-chip subsystems. Equally clear, it’s aiming to run at low power – around 2.7W for the processing island (the bulk of the functionality). It’s all very well to be smart but when you have dozens of smart components scattered around the car, that adds up to a lot of power consumption. The car isn’t going to be very smart if it runs its battery flat.
To read the entire article, please click here: https://semiwiki.com/automotive/284905-ai-safety-and-low-power-compounding-complexity/