MOSIS
MOSIS (Metal Oxide Semiconductor Implementation Service) provides chip design tools and related services that enable universities, government agencies, research institutes and businesses to prototype chips efficiently and cost-effectively.
Operated by the University of Southern California's Information Sciences Institute (ISI), MOSIS combines customers' orders onto shared multi-project wafers that speed production and reduce costs compared with underutilized single-project wafers. Customers are able to debug and adjust designs, or to commission small-volume runs, without making major production investments. Fabrication costs are also shared by combining multiple designs from a single customer onto one "mask set," or wafer template. According to MOSIS, the service has delivered more than 60,000 integrated circuit designs.[1]
MOSIS was created in 1981 by ISI's Danny Cohen, an Internet pioneer who also developed Voice over Internet Protocol and Video over Internet Protocol.[2] Internet offerings at the time largely consisted of supercomputing services and basic infrastructure such as E-mail or File Transfer Protocol (FTP).[3] One of the first e-commerce providers, MOSIS also launched the "fabless foundry" industry, in which vendors outsource chip orders rather than relying on their own factories.[4] Thousands of students also have learned chip design in MOSIS-associate programs.[5]
Many early MOSIS users were students trying IC layout techniques from the seminal book Introduction to VLSI Design (ISBN 0-201-04358-0) published in 1980 by Caltech professors Carver Mead[6] and Lynn Conway.[7] Some early reduced instruction set computing (RISC) processors such as MIPS (1984) and SPARC (1987) were run through MOSIS during their early design and testing phases.
See also
References
- ↑ https://www.mosis.com/what-is-mosis
- ↑ https://www.wired.com/2012/11/he-engineered-the-internet-to-take-flight/
- ↑ ftp://ftp.isi.edu/isi-pubs/rs-84-139.pdf
- ↑ http://www.isi.edu/about/history/timeline/
- ↑ http://viterbi.usc.edu/news/publications/uscengineer/2005_fall/mosis_turns_25.htm/
- ↑ "Winners' Circle: Carver Mead". Archived from the original on 2014-03-05. Retrieved 2005-04-28.
- ↑ "IEEE History Center - Lynn Conway". 2003-01-02. Archived from the original on 2006-06-18. Retrieved 2004-05-18.
External links
- MOSIS web site
- foveon.com - Foveon - Executive Profiles (archived from 2005)