China 简体中文 Japan 日本语 United States English
International Office Locations
  HOME    COMMUNITY    BLOGS & FORUMS    The Standards Game
The Standards Game

A non-standard report on the 47th DAC

Posted by Karen B on June 24th, 2010

The 47th Design Automation Conference is over and blog posts about the conference are appearing all over. (Sean Murphy is collecting them through the end of July on his website.) Instead of the “standard” post, recapping all the events and highlighting the latest technologies that were featured at the show, I thought I’d take a different approach and write about some things that you won’t read anywhere else.

Conversation Central was a hit. To date, there have been more than 1,000 listens to the 27 shows. From the outside, it looked like a smooth production (thank goodness), yet I had several moments of panic when participants couldn’t make it and we experienced technical difficulties. We even switched our internet service account type at 8:00 am on Monday – our first show started at 9:30. Despite these adrenaline rushes, we had “plan B”s in our back pocket and a producer (Roy Stahl from Synopsys) who magically fixed everything.

The 5 Conversation Central shows with the most listens so far are:

1. UVM: Verifying the Universe – Guests Tom Alsop & Hillel Miller, Host JL Gray

2. A New Era of SoC Design – Guest Subramani Kengeri, Host Phil Dworsky

3. Conversation Central Wrap-up and Sneak Peek – Guest Karen Bartleson, Host Rick Jamison

4. Standards Compliance – Guest Alpesh Shah, Host Karen Bartleson

5. Unconventional Blogging – Guest Brian Bailey, Host Harry Gries

Here’s Gabe Moretti talking with me in the Conversation Central session, “Archangel Gabe Debates with Karen on her Book”. I handed him a stone tablet just for grins and he flashed a million dollar bill (not real, of course) that he claimed was my gratuity to him.

Gabe and Karen in CC Gabe's stone

Here’s Sachin Sapatnekar, the general chair of DAC 2010, being interviewed in Conversation Central by Rich Goldman, who wore 3D glasses for 30 minutes while hosting the session and didn’t get a headache.

IMG00511All the Conversation Central sessions are available for listening, and we encourage comments. There’s a show for everyone, and each one is only 30 minutes. Rate and tell us what you think about the shows you listen to.

At DAC, we gave away more than 400 copies of my book “The Ten Commandments for Effective Standards” to anyone who wanted them. Some of the books went to employees of a major semiconductor company who are getting started in standards, some went to students, and some to long-time standards participants.

More than once, I overheard something like this: “Remember when we were young and came to DAC and wondered how all the old people knew each other? Now, we’re those old people.”

Rich Goldman and Mike Santarini have big hearts. Reportedly, they were blubbering in the audience during the high-school panel, “You Don’t Know Jack”, when a 16-year-old girl thanked all of us for our contributions to her world.

Some members of the press couldn’t get into some sessions that bloggers could. (They weren’t happy.)That’s quite a switch from a couple of years ago when bloggers couldn’t get into the press room, and they weren’t happy.

The Synopsys media dinner was delightful (except that the Mr. Stox restaurant let Mentor Graphics host their customer party at the same time ;-) ). The people at my table talked about earthquakes, radar detectors, and VMM whoopee cushions.

Twitter and blogging were nothing new at the 47th DAC. Last year, Twitter was a phenomenon at DAC, with the Twitter Tower and the hashtag, #46DAC, and I taught a special session “Twitter for Newbies” that was attended by the one and only Richard Goering. This year, #47DAC tweets made 551,104 impressions after the first week from 1500 tweets, the maximum allowed to be analyzed by Twitter(#46DAC tweets made 189, 368 impressions). Richard Goering was in the top 5 twitterers.

image

Chi-Foon Chan is really not a monster. He just played one at the Synopsys Interoperability Breakfast.

Chi-Foon 2010 Three little DAC factoids:

1. If a company books a block of rooms at the Marriott, someone gets a suite (more like an apartment).

2. Band-aid blister ampoules are amazingly effective.

3. Newcomers to DAC didn’t know about the bagpipes.

Finally, something you probably don’t care about, but the week before DAC, I cleaned out my clothes closet. This was the result:

IMG00499

With the 47th DAC behind us, we’ll keep Conversation Central going (let me know if you’d like to hear any specific topics or guests) while planning what we’ll do at the 48th DAC. See you there!

VN:F [1.9.8_1114]
Rating: 0.0/5 (0 votes cast)
  • Print
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Google Buzz
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Twitter

3 Responses to “A non-standard report on the 47th DAC”

  1. Gary Dare says:

    Thanks again to you, Karen, and to Synopsys for setting up Conversation Central on behalf of those who could not attend DAC 47. I know of two people (one of them me!) who were tuned in from Canada, as well as on Twitter …

    As for your Top Five, a surprise that Gary Smith’s spot wasn’t in there, if not #1!

    VA:F [1.9.8_1114]
    Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)
  2. Karen says:

    Gary,

    You (and everyone) are very welcome! I’m so glad Conversation Central is valuable. Let me know if you have ideas on how to make it even better as I keep it going – monthly to begin with.

    BTW, Gary’s show is #9 of 27 at the moment. Not bad at all!! I think the more the guests promote their shows, the more listens they get. Tell Gary to advertise himself. :)

    I hope you’re having a wonderful summer,
    Karen

    VA:F [1.9.8_1114]
    Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)
  3. Kathryn says:

    I hope you recycled your clotheshangers!

    VA:F [1.9.8_1114]
    Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Leave a Reply

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>