India Gearing Up for Big Supercomputing Expansion

Rs 1.5 crore funding?? Is it some kind of joke?? It’s not even enough to hire couple of decent engineers!!
I could be wrong about this, but as far as I know the IDEX projects are divided in 3 stages :

1. The first stage is competing against other companies to win in a certain "challenge". This is what this company has done, once you do that you get your initial investment or "seed money".
2. You are to use that money and the host service's labs(in this case Navy's labs) to make a prototype and test it. Clear this step and you get another investment which you will use to begin production.
3. Once production starts on field testing begins, clearing which will land you the order to make this thing in numbers for service wise adoption.

Along with these guys the Tonbo folks have won too(of course there are many others as well). The Tonbo won the "See Through Armour Technology" challenge and have already made a prototype. They have been working on this tech much before the IDEX came to be. Here is a look at their prototype :


 
I could be wrong about this, but as far as I know the IDEX projects are divided in 3 stages :

1. The first stage is competing against other companies to win in a certain "challenge". This is what this company has done, once you do that you get your initial investment or "seed money".
2. You are to use that money and the host service's labs(in this case Navy's labs) to make a prototype and test it. Clear this step and you get another investment which you will use to begin production.
3. Once production starts on field testing begins, clearing which will land you the order to make this thing in numbers for service wise adoption.

Along with these guys the Tonbo folks have won too(of course there are many others as well). The Tonbo won the "See Through Armour Technology" challenge and have already made a prototype. They have been working on this tech much before the IDEX came to be. Here is a look at their prototype :


That company provides design services. I guess they are providing some kind of services to Navy and hence the 1.5 crore contract. I won’t read much from that. Any meaningful chip design needs at least 10 million USD as seed money.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: Gautam
Investing in Fabs is not a good idea. It’s next to impossible to recover the investment. We should invest in system design and after reaching critical mass, we can design our own chips ( backward integration). But in any case fabless model is the way to go.

So you suggest we design Chips then have them made by TSMC and Global foundries kind ?
 
C-DAC is first off the block to make desi chip

Electronics research organisation is also at work on building a supercomputer by 2022
Priyanka Sangani | ETtech | April 10, 2019, 06:46 IST


68803981.cms


Image for representation only

Premier electronics research organisation, the Center for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC), is designing exascale computing systems as well as India's first chip, in a bid to develop homegrown solutions for a range of applications.

"We're working towards having a viable architecture for exascale computing ready by 2022. This would bring in a lot of disruptive technology," Hemant Darbari, director general, C-DAC told ET.

Exascale computing refers to computing systems with a capability of one exaflops, or one billion billion calculations per second. In comparison, the fastest supercomputer in the world has a computing power of 143.5 petaflops, or one thousand million million calculations per second.

C-DAC is also working on a range of processors for image processing and smart energy meters, apart from developing India's first 64-bit quad-core microprocessor.

It is also designing systems and applications in five core areas, including artificial intelligence, language computing, internet of everything (a concept where any digital device is connected to the internet), and secure computing.

In language computing, C-DAC will soon launch a speech-to-speech translation project that will translate English into other Indian languages. Over time, this will be expanded to translations within Indian languages.

Over the last few months, C-DAC has also developed a range of applications that use emerging technologies, including blockchain.

"We have created our own distributed ledger technology which we're currently using for a land records project in Andhra Pradesh. This would also be useful in defence and strategic applications where security is important," said Darbari.

Another project deals with the use of wireless sensors to send personalised tips such as information on pests, plant disease and irrigation schedules, to farmers.

C-DAC is first off the block to make desi chip - ETtech

Seems the processor development is going according to plan :

India to build 11 new supercomputers, with indigenous processors developed by C-DAC

Govt approval signals start of second phase of National Supercomputing Mission. By 2022, it aims to install 73 indigenous supercomputers across India.


By Mohana Basu, 22 December, 2019 5:59 pm IST
Supercomputer-1-696x391.jpg

Param Shivay, the first indigenously-assembled supercomputer, installed in IIT (BHU) | Photo by special arrangement

New Delhi: The central government has approved the building and installation of 11 new supercomputers in research institutes across India, ushering in the next phase of the National Supercomputing Mission (NSM).

By 2022, the government aims to install 73 indigenous supercomputers across the country.

The NSM is being steered by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology and the Department of Science and Technology (DST). It is being implemented through Pune’s Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC) and Bengaluru’s Indian Institute of Science (IISc).

Supercomputers have very high processing capabilities, required in applications such as climate modelling, weather predictions, national security and government information systems.

First phase


In the first phase of the NSM, parts for the supercomputers were imported and assembled in India. The first supercomputer assembled indigenously, called Param Shivay, was installed in IIT (BHU) this year, and was inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, also the Varanasi MP.

Similar systems Param Shakti and Param Brahma were installed at IIT-Kharagpur and IISER, Pune.

Three more supercomputers will be operational by 2020 — at IIT-Kanpur, JN Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, Bengaluru, and IIT-Hyderabad.

Future plan

Milind Kulkarni, head of the NSM, told ThePrint that the supercomputers installed so far are about 60 per cent indigenous, with the motherboards developed by Intel.

However, he said the 11 systems in the next phase will have processors designed by C-DAC, and will have a cumulative capacity of 10 petaflops — where ‘flop’ stands for floating point operations per second, indicating an extremely high computing power.

The C-DAC processor is undergoing testing and will be ready by March 2020, Kulkarni said. He said C-DAC is partnering with industry to market this indigenous processor, which is likely to bring down the cost of a computer motherboard by 10 per cent.

The 11 new supercomputers will be installed at different IITs, NITs and IISERs.

“One system will be installed at C-DAC exclusively for small and medium enterprises, so that they can train employees as well as work on supercomputers at very low cost,” Kulkarni said.

In the third phase of the NSM, the aim will be to build fully indigenous supercomputers.

The government has also approved a project to develop a cryogenic cooling system, which rapidly dissipates the heat generated by a computing chip. This will be built together by IIT-Bombay and C-DAC.

The total budget for the entire NSM is Rs 4,500 crore, funded jointly by the MEITY and the DST.

India to build 11 new supercomputers, with indigenous processors developed by C-DAC
 
@_Anonymous_ @Ashwin @Bali78 et al.

India’s Chips – How Good Is Desi ?

November 9, 2019
By Baishakhi Dutta
1578247495618.png

Image for representational purpose only.

It is exciting to know that India finally has its own set of electronic chips today, thanks to the efforts of our academic institutes and industry players. But how competitive are these when compared to global scales – in terms of technology, quality, and cost ?


The Indian chip design industry – including very large-scale integration (VLSI) design – is an integral part of the ESDM ecosystem. Growing demand for consumer electronic goods, a burgeoning telecom and networking market, and significant growth in the use of portable and wireless products are driving the growth of the semiconductor design industry. With the top 25 semiconductor companies present in India today, we have found our unique place on the global radar.

It is only recently that India has started finding its claim to success, in manufacturing, but the fabless design industry has been onto a good start. At present, India is well recognised as a favourable destination for fabless design services. Very recently, India has witnessed some major breakthroughs in the chip design space by some organisations as well as academic institutions to boost the ecosystem. But how do these desi chips fair against the global qualities ? What will be the main applicational benefits for electronics manufacturers ? Let’s find out :

‘Made in India’ chips – A closer look

The year 2018 witnessed a hallmark breakthrough in the Indian chip designing space with a declaration by a group of engineers from the Indian Institute of Technology-Madras. The team shared with the world their success story of developing the first indigenously-built microprocessor, for use in mobile computing and wireless devices. Thus began an era of technological breakthroughs and further strengthened when Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay, Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC) and Saankhya Labs declared similar achievements, thus showing the country the potential that Indian design ecosystem has. Let’s take a closer look into the desi chips :

SHAKTI by IIT Madras :

1578248061983.png

1578248164668.png

SHAKTI is India’s first-ever RISC-V architecture-based microprocessor for smartphones and IoT devices. SHAKTI was developed in collaboration with Bluespec, a US-based semiconductor tool design company and creator of an electronics hardware description language (HDL) named after the company. The Bluespec HDL was used to write functions into the chip. Earlier, chips were used to be designed in Verilog, which is a complicated language. Whereas in Bluespec, one can mathematically analyse the code to check for a bug. Bluespec also doesn’t let the chip commit a certain set of mistakes which typically happens with Verilog. So, the SHAKTI program is not just about evaluating chips but also use newer technologies for developing the chips.

AJIT by IIT Bombay :
1578248233921.png

Engineers from the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (IIT-B) have developed a new microprocessor called AJIT—the first-ever microprocessor to be conceptualised, designed, developed and manufactured in India. AJIT marks the first time in the country’s history where the industry, academia and the government have come together.

AJIT microprocessor is less than two US dollar (Rs.100 to be exact) ! However, AJIT isn’t going to power a smartphone for it is designed to power India’s satellites for IRNSS. Plans are underway to use AJIT in the receivers being developed for NAVIC or IRNSS, an indigenous navigation system for the Indian subcontinent. The processor has a clock speed of around 70-120MHz and is built on a 180nm technology. The clock speed of 400-500MHz is achievable in the next upgrade.

Pruthvi-3 by Saankhya Labs :
1578248456078.png

It is an improvement over the previous Pruthvi chip (Pruthvi 1) that was launched in 2015, and can be used in multiple communication products including mobile devices, broadcast television, satellite communications, and defence communications. Pruthvi-3 is a fully programmable multi-standard chipset that supports next-generation broadcast standards.

Available in multiple package options (SL3000 and SL4000), Pruthvi-3 will enable live broadcast TV capability on mobile devices and support video offload services from mobile networks to broadcast network. The Pruthvi-3 is an “advanced SDR SoC” manufactured in “28-nm (nanometre) FDSOI (Fully Depleted Silicon On Insulator)” process supporting advanced “Physical Layer” functionality. The chip is ready for emerging technologies like 5G, machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI). Saankhya Labs is pioneering a concept called 5G broadcast that marries both ML and 5G.

Unnamed by C-DAC :
1578248575720.png

C-DAC has been entrusted with the mission of the development of an indigenous design of a family of microprocessors, IPs, SoCs and ecosystem supporting the product development to meet India’s requirements for strategic, industrial and commercial sectors. Krishna Kumar Rao, project-in-charge of microprocessor development program informed that C-DAC successfully completed the design, coding, and testing of a series of 64-bit single/dual/quad-core superscalar out-of-order high-performance processors based on RISC-V Instruction Set Architecture, multi-level caches, memory management unit and coherent interconnect.

The microprocessor IPs are customizable for better performance/power targeted for various strategic/industrial/commercial applications. The SoC devices will be fabricated embedding the 64-bit quad-core microprocessor operating at 2.0GHz targeted for various embedded applications like vehicle tracking systems, set-top box, secure router, smartphone, tablet PC, etc.

Screenshot (664).png

(A comparative analysis of the desi chips)

No compromise on testing and certifications

The major payoff of an invention kicks in when any kind of compromise is done at the testing and certification stage. Hence, with the immediate announcement of the ‘Made in India’ chips, a series of concerns started flooding in from the nook and corner of the country. To answer some of those questions, we sought views from the experts themselves who have been spearheading such groundbreaking inventions.

Commenting on SHAKTI, G.S Madhusudan, senior project advisor of IIT Madras stated that all their testing methodologies are open source. A lot of testing was done before the chip goes for fabrication. After the chip is fabricated, the foundry or the entity that manufactures the chip also goes through chip-level testing. After that, the standard test, as well as some application test, is done to check the stability and the performance of the chip. “We follow standard industry norms, but one highlight of the SHAKTI program is called formal verification. There are mathematical methods by which one can simply look at the code and decide whether it is correct or not. So mathematically it is impossible for a bug to come”, said Madhusudan.

The Pruthvi-3 chipset also underwent testing both in the design and manufacturing phases. It follows a list of standardised tests from a manufacturing and environmental perspective. The functionality gets tested by Saankhya Labs as well as by customers. The certification of the system varies according to applications (e.g automotive, defense, etc.)

In the case of the AJIT microprocessor, the design-level verification is taken care of by IIT-B, while the fab-level test is done by the Semi-Conductor Laboratory (SCL). Fabricated semiconductor chips undergo a rigorous semiconductor test (in IC tester), or automated test equipment (ATE). Depending upon the requirement, the fabricated semiconductor chip conforms to various standards such as MIL, radiation hardening Rad Hard), etc. It conforms to safety standard test(s). “For the processor, two important parameters that have to be evaluated are the instruction set and the 32/64-bit word and speed”, says Debashish Dutta, ex-MeitY, who has championed the project.

At par with the international standards ?

This leads us to another crucial question, are these chips ready to compete at the international level ? Madhusudan said that there are three broad parameters of evaluating are chip – performance, power consumption and size. The instruction set (also known as the DNA of a chip) of the SHAKTI microprocessor is an international standard called RISC–V. “The language to be used by the chip for computation is decided by 20-30 people across the world. All the standards are decided by an international committee which guarantees the chip to be at par with anything else out there in the market”, assured Madhusudan.

Parag Naik, CEO of Saankhya Labs while commenting on Pruthvi-3 stated that their customers are from the Tier-I cities and expect and ensure quality to international standards. However, he shares his concern that there somehow seems to be a feeling that Indian companies don’t measure up to quality.

Value for money

The inception of the first group of indigenous chips is definitely an exciting achievement for the Indian electronics industry. But electronics manufacturers as well customers are asking an important question along the lines – will these chips be economically beneficial ?

Dutta says, “There are two parts of the cost – one is the design cost including the intellectual property rights (IPR), and the other fabrication cost including volume of scale. Cost of fabrication has again two parts – one NRE (non-recurring expenses) and the second recurring (volume). Established international semiconductor fabs have a pricing advantage due to the ecosystem, supply chain, etc. Indian designed chips can same on account of the IPR cost etc.”

Madhusudan gives SHAKTI as an example, “In terms of upfront cost, it is cheaper. But more importantly, our design is also very optimal in terms of manufacturing. So ultimately the cost of the chip is tied more or less to the size of the chip.”

Ready to go bulk ?

While the Indian fabless industry has made a mark for itself in the global marketplace, our presence in the manufacturing space is close to negligible when it comes to bulk production of chips.

Naik stated that chip manufacturing requires billions of dollars of investment and OPEX to keep the factories running. According to him, as a country, India should focus first on design skills which will eventually help to strengthen the hardware ecosystem. A similar view has been shared by Dutta who strongly believes that India is not yet ready for bulk chip manufacturing. However, commenting about AJIT, Dutta opined that the researchers expect that they will be able to manufacture the microprocessor in bulk within a year or two with keeping the cost as little as Rs.100 ($1.50 approx).

Open Source – The major game-changer

The contribution of open source technologies has been quite profound with the introduction of open-source EDA tools helping engineers design chips quicker and in an inexpensive manner. With the introduction of open-source architecture like RISC-V and so on, the involvement of open source in electronic chip design has become even more impactful.

Naik is of the opinion that currently open-source technology is nonexistent when it comes to chip manufacturing but a huge potential lies ahead in the field of chip designing. Open source could play a part in the design process in terms of EDA tools etc. Madhusudan commented that the open-source chip movement has just started but how it will change the world is something that remains to be seen.

The widespread implementation of RISC-V points out to some of the advantages which are beneficial for both the chip designer and the manufacturer. All chips follow an instruction set architecture. So when you write a high-level computer program, the language compiler breaks it down into the commands which the chip can understand. RISC-V allows any company to experiment with CPU design in order to prevent creating cumbersome designs. Hence, project coordinators and designers strongly suggest the Indian designers to switch over to open source completely, with RISC-V and ARM taking the industry by storm.

The final take

A closer look at the indigenously developed chips denotes the rapidly changing Indian design environment. Concerns like technological implementation, cost, issues related to standards, quality control and so on have been nicely addressed by the researchers who have put in their blood and sweat into creating a new realm of a technological breakthrough. All these factors assure us that the country’s design space is matured enough to step into the next level of business, i.e. the chip manufacturing. It is only a matter of time, to see the much-awaited dream turn into a reality !

India’s Chips - How Good Is Desi? - ElectronicsB2B
 
@_Anonymous_ @Ashwin @Bali78 et al.

India’s Chips – How Good Is Desi ?

November 9, 2019
By Baishakhi Dutta
View attachment 12735
Image for representational purpose only.

It is exciting to know that India finally has its own set of electronic chips today, thanks to the efforts of our academic institutes and industry players. But how competitive are these when compared to global scales – in terms of technology, quality, and cost ?

The Indian chip design industry – including very large-scale integration (VLSI) design – is an integral part of the ESDM ecosystem. Growing demand for consumer electronic goods, a burgeoning telecom and networking market, and significant growth in the use of portable and wireless products are driving the growth of the semiconductor design industry. With the top 25 semiconductor companies present in India today, we have found our unique place on the global radar.

It is only recently that India has started finding its claim to success, in manufacturing, but the fabless design industry has been onto a good start. At present, India is well recognised as a favourable destination for fabless design services. Very recently, India has witnessed some major breakthroughs in the chip design space by some organisations as well as academic institutions to boost the ecosystem. But how do these desi chips fair against the global qualities ? What will be the main applicational benefits for electronics manufacturers ? Let’s find out :

‘Made in India’ chips – A closer look

The year 2018 witnessed a hallmark breakthrough in the Indian chip designing space with a declaration by a group of engineers from the Indian Institute of Technology-Madras. The team shared with the world their success story of developing the first indigenously-built microprocessor, for use in mobile computing and wireless devices. Thus began an era of technological breakthroughs and further strengthened when Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay, Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC) and Saankhya Labs declared similar achievements, thus showing the country the potential that Indian design ecosystem has. Let’s take a closer look into the desi chips :

SHAKTI by IIT Madras :
View attachment 12737
View attachment 12738
SHAKTI is India’s first-ever RISC-V architecture-based microprocessor for smartphones and IoT devices. SHAKTI was developed in collaboration with Bluespec, a US-based semiconductor tool design company and creator of an electronics hardware description language (HDL) named after the company. The Bluespec HDL was used to write functions into the chip. Earlier, chips were used to be designed in Verilog, which is a complicated language. Whereas in Bluespec, one can mathematically analyse the code to check for a bug. Bluespec also doesn’t let the chip commit a certain set of mistakes which typically happens with Verilog. So, the SHAKTI program is not just about evaluating chips but also use newer technologies for developing the chips.

AJIT by IIT Bombay :
View attachment 12739
Engineers from the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (IIT-B) have developed a new microprocessor called AJIT—the first-ever microprocessor to be conceptualised, designed, developed and manufactured in India. AJIT marks the first time in the country’s history where the industry, academia and the government have come together.

AJIT microprocessor is less than two US dollar (Rs.100 to be exact) ! However, AJIT isn’t going to power a smartphone for it is designed to power India’s satellites for IRNSS. Plans are underway to use AJIT in the receivers being developed for NAVIC or IRNSS, an indigenous navigation system for the Indian subcontinent. The processor has a clock speed of around 70-120MHz and is built on a 180nm technology. The clock speed of 400-500MHz is achievable in the next upgrade.

Pruthvi-3 by Saankhya Labs :
View attachment 12740
It is an improvement over the previous Pruthvi chip (Pruthvi 1) that was launched in 2015, and can be used in multiple communication products including mobile devices, broadcast television, satellite communications, and defence communications. Pruthvi-3 is a fully programmable multi-standard chipset that supports next-generation broadcast standards.

Available in multiple package options (SL3000 and SL4000), Pruthvi-3 will enable live broadcast TV capability on mobile devices and support video offload services from mobile networks to broadcast network. The Pruthvi-3 is an “advanced SDR SoC” manufactured in “28-nm (nanometre) FDSOI (Fully Depleted Silicon On Insulator)” process supporting advanced “Physical Layer” functionality. The chip is ready for emerging technologies like 5G, machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI). Saankhya Labs is pioneering a concept called 5G broadcast that marries both ML and 5G.

Unnamed by C-DAC :
View attachment 12741
C-DAC has been entrusted with the mission of the development of an indigenous design of a family of microprocessors, IPs, SoCs and ecosystem supporting the product development to meet India’s requirements for strategic, industrial and commercial sectors. Krishna Kumar Rao, project-in-charge of microprocessor development program informed that C-DAC successfully completed the design, coding, and testing of a series of 64-bit single/dual/quad-core superscalar out-of-order high-performance processors based on RISC-V Instruction Set Architecture, multi-level caches, memory management unit and coherent interconnect.

The microprocessor IPs are customizable for better performance/power targeted for various strategic/industrial/commercial applications. The SoC devices will be fabricated embedding the 64-bit quad-core microprocessor operating at 2.0GHz targeted for various embedded applications like vehicle tracking systems, set-top box, secure router, smartphone, tablet PC, etc.

View attachment 12736
(A comparative analysis of the desi chips)

No compromise on testing and certifications

The major payoff of an invention kicks in when any kind of compromise is done at the testing and certification stage. Hence, with the immediate announcement of the ‘Made in India’ chips, a series of concerns started flooding in from the nook and corner of the country. To answer some of those questions, we sought views from the experts themselves who have been spearheading such groundbreaking inventions.

Commenting on SHAKTI, G.S Madhusudan, senior project advisor of IIT Madras stated that all their testing methodologies are open source. A lot of testing was done before the chip goes for fabrication. After the chip is fabricated, the foundry or the entity that manufactures the chip also goes through chip-level testing. After that, the standard test, as well as some application test, is done to check the stability and the performance of the chip. “We follow standard industry norms, but one highlight of the SHAKTI program is called formal verification. There are mathematical methods by which one can simply look at the code and decide whether it is correct or not. So mathematically it is impossible for a bug to come”, said Madhusudan.

The Pruthvi-3 chipset also underwent testing both in the design and manufacturing phases. It follows a list of standardised tests from a manufacturing and environmental perspective. The functionality gets tested by Saankhya Labs as well as by customers. The certification of the system varies according to applications (e.g automotive, defense, etc.)

In the case of the AJIT microprocessor, the design-level verification is taken care of by IIT-B, while the fab-level test is done by the Semi-Conductor Laboratory (SCL). Fabricated semiconductor chips undergo a rigorous semiconductor test (in IC tester), or automated test equipment (ATE). Depending upon the requirement, the fabricated semiconductor chip conforms to various standards such as MIL, radiation hardening Rad Hard), etc. It conforms to safety standard test(s). “For the processor, two important parameters that have to be evaluated are the instruction set and the 32/64-bit word and speed”, says Debashish Dutta, ex-MeitY, who has championed the project.

At par with the international standards ?

This leads us to another crucial question, are these chips ready to compete at the international level ? Madhusudan said that there are three broad parameters of evaluating are chip – performance, power consumption and size. The instruction set (also known as the DNA of a chip) of the SHAKTI microprocessor is an international standard called RISC–V. “The language to be used by the chip for computation is decided by 20-30 people across the world. All the standards are decided by an international committee which guarantees the chip to be at par with anything else out there in the market”, assured Madhusudan.

Parag Naik, CEO of Saankhya Labs while commenting on Pruthvi-3 stated that their customers are from the Tier-I cities and expect and ensure quality to international standards. However, he shares his concern that there somehow seems to be a feeling that Indian companies don’t measure up to quality.

Value for money

The inception of the first group of indigenous chips is definitely an exciting achievement for the Indian electronics industry. But electronics manufacturers as well customers are asking an important question along the lines – will these chips be economically beneficial ?

Dutta says, “There are two parts of the cost – one is the design cost including the intellectual property rights (IPR), and the other fabrication cost including volume of scale. Cost of fabrication has again two parts – one NRE (non-recurring expenses) and the second recurring (volume). Established international semiconductor fabs have a pricing advantage due to the ecosystem, supply chain, etc. Indian designed chips can same on account of the IPR cost etc.”

Madhusudan gives SHAKTI as an example, “In terms of upfront cost, it is cheaper. But more importantly, our design is also very optimal in terms of manufacturing. So ultimately the cost of the chip is tied more or less to the size of the chip.”

Ready to go bulk ?

While the Indian fabless industry has made a mark for itself in the global marketplace, our presence in the manufacturing space is close to negligible when it comes to bulk production of chips.

Naik stated that chip manufacturing requires billions of dollars of investment and OPEX to keep the factories running. According to him, as a country, India should focus first on design skills which will eventually help to strengthen the hardware ecosystem. A similar view has been shared by Dutta who strongly believes that India is not yet ready for bulk chip manufacturing. However, commenting about AJIT, Dutta opined that the researchers expect that they will be able to manufacture the microprocessor in bulk within a year or two with keeping the cost as little as Rs.100 ($1.50 approx).

Open Source – The major game-changer

The contribution of open source technologies has been quite profound with the introduction of open-source EDA tools helping engineers design chips quicker and in an inexpensive manner. With the introduction of open-source architecture like RISC-V and so on, the involvement of open source in electronic chip design has become even more impactful.

Naik is of the opinion that currently open-source technology is nonexistent when it comes to chip manufacturing but a huge potential lies ahead in the field of chip designing. Open source could play a part in the design process in terms of EDA tools etc. Madhusudan commented that the open-source chip movement has just started but how it will change the world is something that remains to be seen.

The widespread implementation of RISC-V points out to some of the advantages which are beneficial for both the chip designer and the manufacturer. All chips follow an instruction set architecture. So when you write a high-level computer program, the language compiler breaks it down into the commands which the chip can understand. RISC-V allows any company to experiment with CPU design in order to prevent creating cumbersome designs. Hence, project coordinators and designers strongly suggest the Indian designers to switch over to open source completely, with RISC-V and ARM taking the industry by storm.

The final take

A closer look at the indigenously developed chips denotes the rapidly changing Indian design environment. Concerns like technological implementation, cost, issues related to standards, quality control and so on have been nicely addressed by the researchers who have put in their blood and sweat into creating a new realm of a technological breakthrough. All these factors assure us that the country’s design space is matured enough to step into the next level of business, i.e. the chip manufacturing. It is only a matter of time, to see the much-awaited dream turn into a reality !

India’s Chips - How Good Is Desi? - ElectronicsB2B
These processors are not even suitable for university level projects. Many foundries are shutting down 180 nm process even for analog chips and these idiots developed a processor in 180 nm !!
This whole article is a joke with completely absurd claims. The only meaningful development I came across so far is a LTE chip developed by some Bangalore startup, rest are just hot gas.
 
Micron strikes biggest SEZ lease deal in T, picks up 1M sft

Sudipta Sengupta | TNN | Jan 8, 2020, 4:03 IST

Hyderabad: American IT major Micron Technology picked up 1.03 million square feet (10.3 lakh sft) of space at Phoenix’s Tech Zone in Nanakramguda, making it the single largest leasing deal among Telangana’s SEZs.

The lease application was approved on Tuesday, confirmed A Ram Mohan Reddy, zonal development commissioner of Visakhapatnam SEZ (VSEZ) which comprises AP, Telangana and Chhattisgarh. He said the firm would soon occupy 14 floors in the newly constructed SEZ.

“Beginning February 28, 2020, Micron will operate from a temporary incubation space measuring 91,625 sft in the SEZ. Once the permanent office is ready, the operations will move there,” Reddy said. “Micron’s projected investment for the next five years is Rs 3,820 crore, with exports of up to Rs 6,228 crore. The company has also assured employment to 5,000 people – 3,500 men and 1,500 women – over the next five years.”
Industry sources said the leasing agreement between Micron and Phoenix was brokered by global real estate services firm Cushman & Wakefield.

Jayesh Ranjan, the state’s IT secretary, said: “They (Micron) had conveyed their intention to expand in Hyderabad significantly on the day of their inaugural. I am happy that the ramp up has happened much faster than expected.”

Micron Technology, which made its first stop in India at Bengaluru, entered Hyderabad in 2019 and set up its Global Development Centre in Madhapur. The centre was officially inaugurated in October last year.

“In the last nine months we have sanctioned lease for 73 units across the 53 SEZs in the zone. Of this, 70% are in Telangana and rest in Andhra Pradesh. Some of the big leases, apart from Micron, have been between 1 lakh and 3 lakh sft,” Reddy said.

Headquartered in Boise (Idaho), Micron provides computer memory and computer data storage solutions. It has a presence across 18 countries and 37,000 team members.

Micron strikes biggest SEZ lease deal in T, picks up 1M sft | Hyderabad News - Times of India
 
Union Budget Likely To Offer Production Incentives For Fabless Chip Companies

by IANS - Jan 23, 2020, 9:12 am
1579770353829.png

Workers at an assembly line of Highly Electrical Appliances India Pvt Ltd at a company air-conditioner compressor plant at Matoda, some near Ahmedabad. (SAM PANTHAKY/AFP/Getty Images)

The Union Budget 2020 may unveil a scheme on production linked benefits to attract hi-tech manufacturing in semiconductors, and microprocessors to India, apart from giving tax incentives to solar electric charging infrastructure, computers, and servers for its thrust in manufacturing of global products to reduce imports.

The Union Budget 2020 may unveil a scheme on production linked benefits to attract hi-tech manufacturing in semiconductors, and microprocessors to India, apart from giving tax incentives to solar electric charging infrastructure, computers, and servers for its thrust in manufacturing of global products to reduce imports.

To make it look more attractive to MNCs to opt for domestic electronics manufacturing in India, the Budget may dish out production-linked subsidies for companies involved in semiconductor fabrication. This is aimed at inviting global semiconductor, and microprocessor companies to set up plants in India.

Earlier also, the government had announced schemes for setting up semiconductor plants in the country.

The National Policy for Electronics, 2019, argues for special support for developing core competencies in the strategic sub-sectors like fabless chip design industry.

The government could provide tax incentives to high-tech manufacturing plants in the fields of solar photovoltaic cells, lithium storage batteries, solar electric charging infrastructure, computers, servers, and laptops.

For 'Make in India', there may be investment-linked income tax exemptions under Section 35AD of the Income Tax Act and other indirect tax benefits.

Many global semiconductor companies such as ARM, Qualcomm, Intel, Cadence and Texas Instruments have set up design and software development infrastructure here but per se, chip manufacturing plants are still elusive for India.

Intel, AMD and ARM for microprocessors, and Qualcomm, Samsung and MediaTek are the names in this segment globally who also cater to the telecom segment and their chips are imported by Indian companies.

The Indian requirement for chips are completely met through imports. The Indian semiconductor component market is expected to be worth $32.35 billion by 2025, growing at a compunded annual growth rate of 10.1 per cent between 2018 and 2025, according to the Indian Electronics and Semiconductor Association (IESA), an industry body.

China, on the contrary, is building a homegrown chip programme, eyeing adoption of local semiconductors in 70 per cent of its products by 2025, up from 16 per cent currently.

In last few years, the Indian government has launched a slew of schemes to boost local manufacturing of electronic goods. Total production of electronic goods in value terms more than doubled from $31.2 billion in FY15 to $65.5 billion in FY19, led by mobile phones, shows data from the Reserve Bank of India's report.

Union Budget Likely To Offer Production Incentives For Fabless Chip Companies
 
Union Budget Likely To Offer Production Incentives For Fabless Chip Companies

by IANS - Jan 23, 2020, 9:12 am
View attachment 13412
Workers at an assembly line of Highly Electrical Appliances India Pvt Ltd at a company air-conditioner compressor plant at Matoda, some near Ahmedabad. (SAM PANTHAKY/AFP/Getty Images)

The Union Budget 2020 may unveil a scheme on production linked benefits to attract hi-tech manufacturing in semiconductors, and microprocessors to India, apart from giving tax incentives to solar electric charging infrastructure, computers, and servers for its thrust in manufacturing of global products to reduce imports.

The Union Budget 2020 may unveil a scheme on production linked benefits to attract hi-tech manufacturing in semiconductors, and microprocessors to India, apart from giving tax incentives to solar electric charging infrastructure, computers, and servers for its thrust in manufacturing of global products to reduce imports.

To make it look more attractive to MNCs to opt for domestic electronics manufacturing in India, the Budget may dish out production-linked subsidies for companies involved in semiconductor fabrication. This is aimed at inviting global semiconductor, and microprocessor companies to set up plants in India.

Earlier also, the government had announced schemes for setting up semiconductor plants in the country.

The National Policy for Electronics, 2019, argues for special support for developing core competencies in the strategic sub-sectors like fabless chip design industry.

The government could provide tax incentives to high-tech manufacturing plants in the fields of solar photovoltaic cells, lithium storage batteries, solar electric charging infrastructure, computers, servers, and laptops.

For 'Make in India', there may be investment-linked income tax exemptions under Section 35AD of the Income Tax Act and other indirect tax benefits.

Many global semiconductor companies such as ARM, Qualcomm, Intel, Cadence and Texas Instruments have set up design and software development infrastructure here but per se, chip manufacturing plants are still elusive for India.

Intel, AMD and ARM for microprocessors, and Qualcomm, Samsung and MediaTek are the names in this segment globally who also cater to the telecom segment and their chips are imported by Indian companies.

The Indian requirement for chips are completely met through imports. The Indian semiconductor component market is expected to be worth $32.35 billion by 2025, growing at a compunded annual growth rate of 10.1 per cent between 2018 and 2025, according to the Indian Electronics and Semiconductor Association (IESA), an industry body.

China, on the contrary, is building a homegrown chip programme, eyeing adoption of local semiconductors in 70 per cent of its products by 2025, up from 16 per cent currently.

In last few years, the Indian government has launched a slew of schemes to boost local manufacturing of electronic goods. Total production of electronic goods in value terms more than doubled from $31.2 billion in FY15 to $65.5 billion in FY19, led by mobile phones, shows data from the Reserve Bank of India's report.

Union Budget Likely To Offer Production Incentives For Fabless Chip Companies


Okay, responsible minds dealing in this technology have once again failed to set up own Fabless design firms to world level. And no AMD, no intel and no ARM or Qualcom would provide any latest technology to India.

Another way of creating fab and increase employment with foreign design as labour is cheaper in India. We are 25 years behind in chip designing.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Paro
India plans national mission on quantum technology to get super-secure communication networks

Kalyan Ray, DHNS, New Delhi, Jan 24 2020, 23:52pm IST
1580012250649.png

Such powerful computers put a question mark on the security of commonplace modern communication systems that are secured by classical encryption codes

India has begun working on a national mission that may eventually lead to the creation of a super-secure communication network to make online financial transactions hacking-proof besides ensuring full-proof safety of every bit of digital communication.

Such an unconditional level of information security would come from the frontier area of quantum technology that Indian scientists would explore under the planned mission.

“The detailed project report on the national mission on quantum technology and application is being written. The mission will have components on basic research, product development and applications,” Urbasi Sinha, a scientist at Raman Research Institute and one of members of the panel preparing the report told DH.

While the national mission would come under the Department of Science and Technology, the Indian Space Research Organisation is on-board and may provide satellites at a later date for experiments, for which the RRI making a payload. The initiative is being catalysed by the Principal Scientific Adviser to the government.

A fundamental bedrock of modern physics, quantum mechanics deals with the behaviour of matter and light at the atomic and subatomic scales.

Quantum technology exploits some of the spooky properties of quantum mechanics – such as quantum entanglement, superposition and tunnelling – in developing practical applications like computing and cryptography.

Early generation quantum computers are a reality though they are not commercially available. In October, Google reported developing a 53 qubit chip (Sycamore) that in 3.20 minutes would finish a task, which a 200 petaflop super-computer would take about 10,000 years.

Such powerful computers put a question mark on the security of commonplace modern communication systems that are secured by classical encryption codes.

That's where the proposed Indian mission intends to chip in. With China making rapid progress, one of the focus areas in the proposed Indian mission is quantum cryptography.

“Existing communication networks are secured by classical encryption techniques (like the RSA code) that can be broken by powerful computers. With quantum computers around, the classical cryptography is at risk. Quantum cryptography, on the other hand, is unbreakable,” said a scientist, who is aware of the mission but didn't wish to be identified.

Last week RRI hosted a scientific conference, in which leading experts from all over the world came to Bangalore to discuss the challenges ahead. Scientists associated with Chinese satellite Micius, the world's only quantum satellite was also attended the conference.

“The scientific inputs will help us better prepare the detailed project report that would be submitted to the DST for funding,” Sinha said. As a prelude, the DST since 2017 has started funding projects under its Quantum Science and Technology Program, but the scales are likely to expand further under the national mission.

India plans national mission on quantum technology to get super-secure communication networks
 
  • Like
Reactions: _Anonymous_
Country's first Super Fab Lab inaugurated by Kerala CM

By Writankar Mukherjee
PTI | Jan 25, 2020, 07.14 PM IST

Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan inaugurated the facility through remote control from Palakkad, where he attended a function at the government Polytechic College.

kerala.jpg

Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan inaugurated the facility through remote control from Palakkad, where he attended a function at the government Polytechic College.

The country's first Super Fab Lab, which will give a major push to the hardware industry in the country and the only such facility outside the U.S., was launched at the Integrated Startup Complex of the Kerala Startup Mission (KSUM) here on Saturday.

Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan inaugurated the facility through remote control from Palakkad, where he attended a function at the government Polytechic College.

The Super Fab Lab will function in collaboration with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

The Fab Labs concept, the only one outside the U.S., is the brainchild of Dr Neil Gershenfeld, presently the Director of MIT Centre for Bits and Atoms, who set up the first Fab Lab in the U.S. about 17 years ago, KSUM said.

Dr Gershenfeld was in the city for nearly a week to personally supervise setting up of the Super Fab Lab. Fab Labs are fabrication laboratories offering digital fabrication and computation.

Dr Gershenfeld asserted that the new facility, the only one outside the U.S., not only "has the tools to make anything, it also makes the tools that make things.

It will break down boundaries between the digital and physical worlds," he said.

Relying on Computer Aided Design with additive and subtractive manufacturing, the Super Fab Lab allows researchers, innovators and developers to do things beyond the purview of the states existing fab labs. Dr Gershenfeld said the Super Fab Lab is a pioneering venture by Kerala and would let people produce what they consume

The state-of-art facility enables the state to produce machines locally, for access throughout Kerala. It can be for business, education and almost anything. "It is an exciting initiative and the whole world is watching what is happening here so that they can follow on your footsteps", Dr Gershenfield was quoted as saying by Kerala Startup Mission in a release.

The Super Fab Lab, which is poised to give Indias hardware industry a huge leap by allowing researchers, innovators and developers to do things beyond the purview of the states existing fab labs, will function in collaboration with MIT, it said.

KSUM CEO Dr Saji Gopinath said the Super Fab Lab will give a huge boost to Keralas industrial sector.

"Innovations that happen at the Lab can soon get translated to the industrial sector and we may see quite a few startups springing up in the near future," he said.

The KSUM Super Fab Lab has state-of-the-art machines worth more than Rs seven crore in a 10,000 square feet area.

The Super Fab Lab is set to make ISC one of the countrys most sought-after investment hubs, coming as it is after electronics hardware incubator Maker Village and its biotech counterpart Bio-Nest.

Country's first Super Fab Lab inaugurated by Kerala CM
 
  • Like
Reactions: _Anonymous_
India has begun working on a national mission that may eventually lead to the creation of a super-secure communication network to make online financial transactions hacking-proof besides ensuring full-proof safety of every bit of digital communication.

First properly functionalize INO which is being built in TN past 10 years and still non functional due to lack of talent. Without proper knowledge of quantum physics and particle physics , India can't do anything in quantum computation.
 
IISc build through-the-wall radar on chip smaller than grain of rice

Chethan Kumar | TNN | Jan 27, 2020, 20:41 IST
1-insignifican.jpg

Radar-on-chip : Packaged chip is smaller than a one-rupee coin and chip itself is slightly smaller than a grain of rice.

BENGALURU: Researchers at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), in a significant breakthrough, have developed a "through-the-wall" radar (TWR), built on a chip smaller than a grain of rice.

The team of scientists was led by Gaurab Banerjee, associate professor at the Department of Electrical Communication Engineering.

Developed using Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) technology, this radar has a single transmitter, three receivers, and an advanced frequency synthesizer capable of generating complex radar signals, all packed together into a tiny chip.

1580222071849.png

An FMCW chirp generated by the transmitter

Its small size, researchers said, can enable mass production at a low cost. "Such radars can have wide-ranging applications in the defence sector, as well as areas such as healthcare, transportation and agriculture," a statement IISc shared with TOI, reads.

“Only a handful of countries in the world today have the ability to put the entire electronics of radar on a chip,” says Banerjee.

The TWR imaging has always been one of the most challenging radar design problems, Banerjee says, explaining: "For one, the signal can get significantly damped while passing through walls. To overcome this, radio waves consisting of a large number of frequencies need to be used, which can complicate the design."

"...These radars also use a more complex signal, known as a chirp, which requires customized electronics such as a microwave transmitter, a receiver and a frequency synthesizer."

insignifican.jpg

A photomicrograph of the TWR radar-on-chip compared to a grain of rice. Credit: ARSL, IISc

With their design, the IISc team has now managed to squeeze all of these electronic components into a single, tiny chip. They used new architectural and circuit design techniques to overcome challenges specific to radars – such as the design of a wide fractional bandwidth transceiver, the statement reads.

“The same design techniques that have enabled smaller and cheaper smartphones can now be used to miniaturize the complex electronics of a radar system into a small chip,” says Banerjee.

Although the chip was originally developed for airport security-related applications, Banerjee’s group is also exploring applications in other areas such as healthcare. For instance, it can be used to monitor the health of elderly people.

“It might be possible for a centrally-placed TWR system to scan the house, and construct a model of when a person is standing or sitting down. If there is a sudden change in gait due to a fall, it can trigger an alarm,” says Banerjee, adding that it could also monitor breathing and respiration rates and assess the severity of a fall.

This research was funded by the IMPRINT programme of the Government of India, with additional financial contributions from the Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD) and the Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO).

Bharat Electronics Limited (BEL), a defence PSU, has been an active industrial partner in this IMPRINT project since its inception.

IISc build through-the-wall radar on chip smaller than grain of rice | India News - Times of India
 
  • Like
Reactions: sid4587
FM's Rs 8,000 crore boost will help India bridge gap in Quantum computing with US, China
India’s plan to invest Rs 8,000 crore over the next five years in the National Misssion on Quantum technology and its applications comes at a time when the world is making bets on the emerging field that has potential impact in areas such as cyber security in the future.

“We are right in time for Quantum investment - Most quantum investments are in the US, we are in perfect time because companies like IBM and Google are going to be investing a ton of money and infrastructure assets towards Asia, countries like Japan and Singapore,” said Sanchit Vir Gogia, chief analyst and CEO at Greyhound Research. “if India has a feasible enablement for quantum we are in perfect time.”

In October, Google became the first company in the world to achieve Quantum Supremacy after its its 54-qubit Sycamore processor was able to perform a calculation in 200 seconds that would have taken the world’s most powerful supercomputer 10,000 years. In 2018, China claimed that it has built a quantum computer and also launched a quantum satellite into space.

India’s department of science has a national mission on Quantum Technologies and Applications, which is collaborating with institutions and companies to build homegrown capablity in quantum technologies.

Indian technology service providers have also been carrying out research and development work in quantum computing, as they bet that the technology will increasingly become mainstream.

"This is new. We will not have something next quarter or in the near term. But we are working on it," Parekh said.

The newly appointed IBM CEO, Arvind Krishna has also spoken to media earlier on the importance of India improving its focus on quantum computing, citing that China is heavily investing in the technology.
FM's Rs 8,000 crore boost will help India bridge gap in Quantum computing with US, China
 
India bets big on quantum technology
Quantum technology has been given a massive boost in India’s latest budget, receiving 80 billion rupees (US$1.12 billion) over five years as part of a new national quantum mission.

India’s considerable investment in the field places it alongside the United States, Europe and Russia. In December 2018, US President Donald Trump signed a bill to invest US$1.2 billion over five years in a national quantum initiative, and in 2016, Europe pledged US$1.13 billion for quantum technologies. Russia is also spending the equivalent of hundreds of millions of dollars on quantum technologies.

India’s investment, to be administered by the ministry of science and technology, is a considerable increase on past commitments. In 2018, a quantum-technology research programme received US$27.9 million over five years, as part of the National Mission on Interdisciplinary Cyber-Physical Systems.

Disruptive technologies
Ashutosh Sharma, secretary of the department of science and technology in Delhi, says India’s quantum research is “solid on the theoretical side, but we need to build infrastructure and experimental facilities, we need to build our capacity”. The new mission will oversee the development of quantum technologies for communications, computing, materials development and cryptography. It will coordinate the work of scientists, industry leaders and government departments, says Sharma.

For a long time, the potential for quantum-related research was not really recognized in India, says Urbasi Sinha, a physicist at the Raman Research Institute, Bangalore, one of the earliest institutes in the country to undertake research in the field. “The funding boost now will ensure that India can make significant contributions in these disruptive technologies,” she says.

Overall, India’s science ministry, which oversees the department of science and technology; biotechnology; and scientific and industrial research, received 144 billion rupees in the 2020–21 budget, a 10.8% increase over promised funds in the 2019–20 budget.
India bets big on quantum technology
 
  • Informative
Reactions: Gautam