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Synopsys Rolls Out new Software Tools for Designing AI Chips

SANTA CLARA, California, March 11 (Reuters) - Synopsys on Wednesday rolled out new software tools to handle the fast-increasing complexity of designing ​artificial intelligence chips, the first wave of new offerings after ‌its $35 billion buyout of engineering software firm Ansys.

Synopsys, which announced the new tools at a conference in Silicon Valley, has for decades been one of the main ​suppliers of software used in determining how to arrange ​the tens of billions of transistors that make up chips ⁠from firms such as Advanced Micro Devices and Nvidia, which last ​year invested in $2 billion Synopsys. But flagship offerings from AMD and ​Nvidia are no longer a single chip at all, but instead many smaller "chiplets" stacked and packaged together in increasingly complicated ways.

That trend drove the Ansys deal ​because chip designers now must grapple with problems that used to ​be the realm of mechanical engineers, such as whether the heat generated by ‌chiplet ⁠could cause it warp or expand in ways that could make it crack and separate from its neighbor, destroying a complex chip that can cost tens of thousands of dollars.

Sassine Ghazi, the CEO ​of Synopsys, said ​the new tools ⁠aim to embed those engineering tools into the software tools that chip designers such as Intel ​and others are already using.

"Typically you have engineers designing ​for ⁠each step in a siloed way," Ghazi said. "What ends up happening is that the product is more expensive and it's not operating at ⁠its maximum ​potential. We're putting them in the ​design phase, so you're able to achieve a better performance, lower power and definitely ​lower cost."

Reporting by Stephen Nellis in Santa Clara, California Editing by Nick Zieminski

Source: Reuters


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