FPGA Comparisons
Historically, FPGAs have been slower, less energy efficient and generally achieved less functionality than their fixed ASIC counterparts. An older study had shown that designs implemented on FPGAs need on average 40 times as much area, draw 12 times as much dynamic power, and are three times slower than the corresponding ASIC implementations; however, the times are changing. Today's FPGAs such as the Xilinx Virtex-7 or the Altera Stratix 5 rival ASIC and ASSP solutions providing significantly reduced power, increased speed, lower BOM cost, minimal implementation real-estate, and maximum on-the-fly configurability. Where previously a design may have included 6 to 10 ASICs, today the same design can be achieved using only one FPGA.
Advantages include the ability to re-program in the field to fix bugs, and may include a shorter time to market and lower non-recurring engineering costs. Vendors can also take a middle road by developing their hardware on ordinary FPGAs, but manufacture their final version so it can no longer be modified after the design has been committed.
Xilinx claims that several market and technology dynamics are changing the ASIC/FPGA paradigm:
- Integrated circuit costs are rising aggressively
- ASIC complexity has lengthened development time
- R&D resources and headcount are decreasing
- Revenue losses for slow time-to-market are increasing
- Financial constraints in a poor economy are driving low-cost technologies
These trends make FPGAs a better alternative than ASICs for a larger number of higher-volume applications than they have been historically used for, to which the company attributes the growing number of FPGA design starts (see History).
Some FPGAs have the capability of partial re-configuration that lets one portion of the device be re-programmed while other portions continue running.
Read more about this topic: Field-programmable Gate Array
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