The objective of integrated modular architectures is to pack many functions on less
hardware, and reduce the number of control units, embedded electronics
size, weight and power consumption to design of more efficient systems.
Both embedded systems designers and system architects are "wrestling" with increasing complexity of hardware/software integration, and the alignment of different time-, mission-, and safety-critical functions sharing common resources in an integrated system. Additional rework and verification, schedule delays, transient faults in fielded systems / NFF, add costs and risks to many large programs.
Both embedded systems designers and system architects are "wrestling" with increasing complexity of hardware/software integration, and the alignment of different time-, mission-, and safety-critical functions sharing common resources in an integrated system. Additional rework and verification, schedule delays, transient faults in fielded systems / NFF, add costs and risks to many large programs.
Please
join our webinar on "Are You Deterministic or Not? Guide for Reducing Complexity in Advanced Integrated Systems" to learn about integrated system complexity reduction approaches.
AGENDA:
- Complexity Root-Causes in Integrated Systems
- Complexity and (Exponential) Growth of System States:
- Time-Driven vs Event-Driven
- Synchronous vs. Asynchronous Interfacing
- Hard RT vs Real-Time vs Soft-Time vs All-Together
- Controlling Key System Interfaces
- Controlling Temporal and Logical Behavior
- Platform Perspective, Complexity and Network Capabilities
- Integrated Modular Architectures with Ethernet
- Q&A
(NOTE: you will receive webex access links per email 3-4 hours before webcast!!!)
Are You Deterministic or Not? Guide for Reducing Complexity in Advanced Integrated Systems
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
4:30 pm – 5:45 pm (Central Time (Berlin) - EUROPE)
10:30 am – 11:45 pm (Eastern Time (New York) - USA)
Are You Deterministic or Not? Guide for Reducing Complexity in Advanced Integrated Systems
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
4:30 pm – 5:45 pm (Central Time (Berlin) - EUROPE)
10:30 am – 11:45 pm (Eastern Time (New York) - USA)