Gary Smith’s ESL 2009 Market Trends

 

After the 46th DAC in San Francisco where C synthesis was one of the exhibition highlights, Gary Smith’s latest ESL Market Trends report is yet another confirmation that this discipline is taking off and to paraphrase the report title: “is becoming mainstream”.

  • Healthy market growth

According to the report, ESL synthesis grew from a $22M market in 2007 to $29.5M in 2008, representing a healthy 35% growth and exceeding an earlier forecast of $28.4M. 

  • A clear leader

ESL synthesis is an area where many companies have come and gone. According to the report however, the top 3 companies have remained the same in 2007 and 2008. In order they were: Mentor, Forte and Bluespec. In this dynamic market, the evolutions within this top 3 are especially interesting to note. While both Forte and Bluespec lost market share, Mentor Graphics strengthened its position in this growing segment.

eslmarketshare

  • A “Killer App”

Confirming the importance of ESL synthesis, Gary Smith projects this category to cross the symbolic $100M threshold within 4 short years.

If you would like learn more about what the report defines as a “major killer app”, the following webinar and this Catapult C demo are good places to start.

For those of you in the Boston area, this upcoming workshop will be a perfect opportunity for a hands-on experience on how to cross the gap between algorithm and hardware implementation with C synthesis.

The full “2009 Market Trends” report is available from Gary Smith EDA.

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Commented on November 17, 2009 at 12:24 pm
By SystemC, Ten Years Later… « Thomas Bollaert’s Blog

[...] beyond the NASCUG survey, this trend was recently confirmed by Gary Smith’s latest Market Trends report. This report typically looks at individual product market share. But from there, it is rather [...]

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High-Level Synthesis is entering the mainstream of hardware design, bringing tremendous opportunities and creating stimulating new challenges to hardware designers. This blog is about trends, opinions and experiences with going from C++ to RTL, automatically.