Design Automation Conference Explained

DAC, Design Automation Conference
Last:DAC2023
Next:DAC2024
Website:Design Automation Conference
Frequency:Annual
Status:Active
Founded: in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States
Founder Name:Pasquale (Pat) Pistilli
Participants:6000
Sponsors:ACM Special Interest Group on Design Automation and IEEE Council on Electronic Design Automation

The Design Automation Conference, or DAC, is an annual event, a combination of a technical conference and a trade show, both specializing in electronic design automation (EDA).

DAC receives approximately 1100 research paper submissions annually. A technical program committee of 266 experts performs a double-blind review, selecting 263 papers for publication in the proceedings.[1] [2]

The trade show features approximately 100 companies in the field of design automation such as Cadence Design Systems, Synopsys, Siemens EDA and Ansys.

Over the past few years the conference location has been alternating among Austin and San Francisco. The conference is usually held in June.

DAC is sponsored by two professional societies:

in technical cooperation with IEEE-SSCS (IEEE Solid-State Circuits Society).[3]

DAC is organized by hundreds of volunteer committee members from EDA companies and academia.[4]

Origins

DAC is the oldest and largest conference in EDA, starting in 1964.[5] It grew out of the SHARE ("Society to Help Avoid Redundant Effort") design automation workshop. Its originators Marie Pistilli and Pasquale (Pat) Pistilli were honored by the EDA community. Pat received the highest honor in EDA industry, the Phil Kaufman Award, for this effort, and Marie was honored by having an award established in her name, the Marie Pistilli Award.[6]

Up until the mid-'70s, DAC had sessions on all types of design automation, including mechanical and architectural. After that, for all intents and purposes, the focus shifted to electronic design.[7] Currently, the topics at DAC also include embedded systems, autonomous systems, Artificial Intelligence hardware, hardware security, and Intellectual Property.

Also until the mid-'70s, DAC was strictly a technical conference. Then a few companies started to request space to show their products, and within a few years, the trade show portion of DAC became the main focus of the event. The first commercial DAC was held in June 1984. As a rough metric of the importance of the trade show portion, about 6,300 people attended DAC in 2018, whereas ICCAD, at least as strong technically but with no trade show, drew perhaps a tenth as many attendees.

Recent history

The table below shows the edition, year, location, and the general chair of recent DAC events.[8]

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Denotes future event
Edition Year Location Conference center General chair
26th 1989 Don Thomas
27th 1990 Richard Smith
28th 1991 A. Richard Newton
29th 1992 Daniel Schweikert
30th 1993 Alfred Dunlop
31st 1994 Michael Lorenzetti
32nd 1995 Bryan Preas
33rd 1996 Thomas Pennino
34th 1997 Ellen Yoffa
35th 1998 Basant Chawla
36th 1999
37th 2000
38th 2001
39th 2002 Bryan Ackland
40th 2003 Ian Getreu
41st 2004 Sharad Malik
42nd 2005 William H. Joyner Jr.
43rd 2006 Ellen Sentovich
44th 2007 Steven Levitan
45th 2008 Limor Fix
46th 2009 Andrew Kahng
47th 2010 Sachin Sapatnekar
48th 2011 Leon Stok
49th 2012 Patrick Groeneveld
50th 2013 Yervant Zorian
51st 2014 Soha Hassoun
52nd 2015 Anne Cirkel
53rd 2016 Chuck Alpert
54th2017 Mac McNamara
55th 2018 Xiaobo Sharon Hu
56th 2019 Rob Aitken
57th 2020 Zhuo Li
58th 2021 Harry Foster
59th 2022 Rob Oshana
60th 2023 Jörg Henkel
61st 2024 Vivek De

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Oshana, Rob. DAC '22: Proceedings of the 59th ACM/IEEE Design Automation Conference. 2022. Association for Computing Machinery. 978-1-4503-9142-9. 1346426698.
  2. Web site: Design Automation Conference proceedings 1964-2023 | Association for Computing Machinery Digital Library. dl.acm.org/conference/dac.
  3. Web site: DAC Sponsors | Design Automation Conference. www.dac.com.
  4. https://www.dac.com/committees/executive .
  5. Book: Pistilli, P.O.. Proceedings of the SHARE design automation workshop. 1964. Association for Computing Machinery. 9781450379328. 809795363.
  6. Web site: Women in Electronic Design | Design Automation Conference. dac.com. 2016-02-29. 2016-11-26. https://web.archive.org/web/20161126062723/https://dac.com/content/women-electronic-design. dead.
  7. Book: Newton, A. Richard. 25 years of electronic design automation: a compendium of papers from the Design Automation Conference. 1988. Association for Computing Machinery. 978-0-89791-267-9. 56581424.
  8. Web site: Archive | Design Automation Conference. www.dac.com.