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SiFive is a company founded by Pakistani-American Naveed Sherwani

Samsung to Use SiFive RISC-V Cores for SoCs, Automotive, 5G Applications

Anton Shilov
At the annual RISC-V Summit this week, Samsung disclosed the use SiFive’s RISC-V cores for upcoming chips for a variety of applications. The company is joining a growing list of leading high-tech companies that have adopted the RISC-V architecture.

One of the applications that Samsung is using RISC-V cores in is mmWave RF processing by its upcoming 5G RF front-end modules. The latter will be used for Samsung’s flagship 5G smartphones due in 2020. The RISC-V cores will also be used for AI image sensors, security management, AI computing & control.



Samsung will be the fourth major company that has publicly disclosed its plans to adopt the open-source RISC-V architecture after Western Digital, NVIDIA, and Qualcomm. Western Digital intends to use the technology for a variety of applications, including SSD and HDD controllers. NVIDIA reportedly plans to use it for GPU memory controllers, whereas Qualcomm is set to use RISC-V for mobile SoCs.

All of the said companies have historically used processing cores based on architectures developed by Arm, and will likely continue to use them in the foreseeable future alongside RISC-V implementations. The advantage of RISC-V and the rationale for the vendors like Samsung choosing SiFive designs over Arm designs might be financial, as the former is likely undercutting its big competitor in price. For vendors doing their own microarchitecture designs, such as WD, RISC-V comes with no royalties attached, and offered more flexibility for vendors in terms of implementation. Arm only recently changed course in allowing vendor to implement their own custom instructions to the Cortex designs and architecture. Custom instructions developed by SoC vendors might be a huge benefit for efficient handling of ECC and RF processing among other things.
[URL='https://images.anandtech.com/doci/15228/samsung-risc-v-modem.jpg'][URL]https://www.anandtech.com/show/15228/samsung-to-use-riscv-cores
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SiFive is a company founded by Pakistani-American Naveed Sherwani

Samsung to Use SiFive RISC-V Cores for SoCs, Automotive, 5G Applications

Anton Shilov
At the annual RISC-V Summit this week, Samsung disclosed the use SiFive’s RISC-V cores for upcoming chips for a variety of applications. The company is joining a growing list of leading high-tech companies that have adopted the RISC-V architecture.

One of the applications that Samsung is using RISC-V cores in is mmWave RF processing by its upcoming 5G RF front-end modules. The latter will be used for Samsung’s flagship 5G smartphones due in 2020. The RISC-V cores will also be used for AI image sensors, security management, AI computing & control.



Samsung will be the fourth major company that has publicly disclosed its plans to adopt the open-source RISC-V architecture after Western Digital, NVIDIA, and Qualcomm. Western Digital intends to use the technology for a variety of applications, including SSD and HDD controllers. NVIDIA reportedly plans to use it for GPU memory controllers, whereas Qualcomm is set to use RISC-V for mobile SoCs.

All of the said companies have historically used processing cores based on architectures developed by Arm, and will likely continue to use them in the foreseeable future alongside RISC-V implementations. The advantage of RISC-V and the rationale for the vendors like Samsung choosing SiFive designs over Arm designs might be financial, as the former is likely undercutting its big competitor in price. For vendors doing their own microarchitecture designs, such as WD, RISC-V comes with no royalties attached, and offered more flexibility for vendors in terms of implementation. Arm only recently changed course in allowing vendor to implement their own custom instructions to the Cortex designs and architecture. Custom instructions developed by SoC vendors might be a huge benefit for efficient handling of ECC and RF processing among other things.

https://www.anandtech.com/show/15228/samsung-to-use-riscv-cores
https://images.anandtech.com/doci/15228/samsung-risc-v-modem.jpg
Nice.
 
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Bilal, the founder and CEO of this company is the brains behind Invest in Pakistan. Regrettably, when he met the president of Pakistan last year, the president asked him about employment and bringing capital to Pakistan rather than ask for R&D center in Pakistan lol

He hosted Fawad Chaudhry to California and Pakistan’s science and technology minister was asking Silicon Valley to help with farming in Pakistan. Can’t make this up lol

This is why I want to start a WSJ-type news site or publication, it's to cover initiatives such as this on one hand, and take our overlords to task on the other in such a way they don't understand what's going on, but are losing ground.
 
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This is why I want to start a WSJ-type news site or publication, it's to cover initiatives such as this on one hand, and take our overlords to task on the other in such a way they don't understand what's going on, but are losing ground.

You have a great product with Quwa, why don’t you expand Quwa to cover both economy and technology?
 
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This is why I want to start a WSJ-type news site or publication, it's to cover initiatives such as this on one hand, and take our overlords to task on the other in such a way they don't understand what's going on, but are losing ground.
If you can, trust me on this, Pakistani politicos and pretty much the entire tech ecosystem lives in a bubble. And there’s nothing you can do to change their direction around. It’ll need an entire generation to die and the next to take over before this happens.

I run one of the biggest tech publications in the world, we compete with the likes of Anandtech/Tom’s Hardware et al. We started with Pak in perspective back in the day, but changed direction after seeing how literally in shambles the local industry is. So, the above advice is pretty first hand.
 
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If you can, trust me on this, Pakistani politicos and pretty much the entire tech ecosystem lives in a bubble. And there’s nothing you can do to change their direction around. It’ll need an entire generation to die and the next to take over before this happens.

I run one of the biggest tech publications in the world, we compete with the likes of Anandtech/Tom’s Hardware et al. We started with Pak in perspective back in the day, but changed direction after seeing how literally in shambles the local industry is. So, the above advice is pretty first hand.

It seems this problem goes beyond even the political class in Pakistan. There’s a general apathy to anything that’s not politics and defense related in Pakistan. You can see this phenomenon even on this forum. Technology related topics, even the ones related to Pakistan yield at maximum 5 responses while threads on Nawaz Sharif and PTI can get tens of pages of discussion. It’s an unfortunate reality.

Pakistani tech startups are breaking new grounds and winning big fundings but you will never see such news on this forum or even on mainstream media. Something has to change.
 
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if this company is able to transfer this technology to Pakistan for indigenous manufacture only then it will benefit us otherwise we will remain dependent on foreign imported equipment like in past,the company ceo should take initiative for developing even small R and D center to train our engineers and youth inside Pakistan so our country benefit from it in real sense
 
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If you can, trust me on this, Pakistani politicos and pretty much the entire tech ecosystem lives in a bubble. And there’s nothing you can do to change their direction around. It’ll need an entire generation to die and the next to take over before this happens.

I run one of the biggest tech publications in the world, we compete with the likes of Anandtech/Tom’s Hardware et al. We started with Pak in perspective back in the day, but changed direction after seeing how literally in shambles the local industry is. So, the above advice is pretty first hand.

You're not talking about WCCF Tech are you? If so, it is infamous for being disreputable in the tech circles.
 
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You're not talking about WCCF Tech are you? If so, it is infamous for being disreputable in the tech circles.
Lol, by who? Reddit fanboys? We haven’t been wrong in a single news in over 3 years now. :)
 
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Bilal, the founder and CEO of this company is the brains behind Invest in Pakistan. Regrettably, when he met the president of Pakistan last year, the president asked him about employment and bringing capital to Pakistan rather than ask for R&D center in Pakistan lol

He hosted Fawad Chaudhry to California and Pakistan’s science and technology minister was asking Silicon Valley to help with farming in Pakistan. Can’t make this up lol


Never knew this pioneer. What a vision and charisma. Amazing.

The semiconductor sector is high tech stuff. The country that I live in i.e. The Netherlands is a pioneer in this area. Just have a look at ASML.

The fact that we have a Pakistani who has succeeded in this field and is now willing to expand this into Pakistan is amazing. He needs to be provided all the assistance he requires to produce an army of chip experts. What else can Pakistan hope for when such amazing individuals come forward to provide their services due to love of their country?
 
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SiFive is a company founded by Pakistani-American Naveed Sherwani

A correction is necessary here.
Mr. Naveed Sherwani is not the founder but an appointed CEO. SiFive was founded in 2015 by Krste Asanović, Yunsup Lee, and Andrew Waterman, three researchers from the University of California Berkeley.

https://venturebeat.com/2017/08/15/custom-processor-maker-sifive-appoints-intel-veteran-as-ceo/
https://venturebeat.com/2016/11/29/sifive-launches-open-source-risc-v-custom-chip/
 
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if this company is able to transfer this technology to Pakistan for indigenous manufacture only then it will benefit us otherwise we will remain dependent on foreign imported equipment like in past,the company ceo should take initiative for developing even small R and D center to train our engineers and youth inside Pakistan so our country benefit from it in real sense

He keeps mentioning China for a reason. China is moving like a rocket in the semiconductor industry. The Chinese are going to produce an insane volume of indigenous chips for a multitude of applications. Despite China having an army of people they still need highly skilled and qualified engineers. This is a very complex business. The more brilliant minds you have the better.

Pakistan should definitely tap into this niche market. Not only would our boys and girls get the experience and exposure in world class facilities, but they will bring this back to their homeland. Better, produce world class facilities with the help of China in Pakistan.
 
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A correction is necessary here.
Mr. Naveed Sherwani is not the founder but an appointed CEO. SiFive was founded in 2015 by Krste Asanović, Yunsup Lee, and Andrew Waterman, three researchers from the University of California Berkeley.

https://venturebeat.com/2017/08/15/custom-processor-maker-sifive-appoints-intel-veteran-as-ceo/
https://venturebeat.com/2016/11/29/sifive-launches-open-source-risc-v-custom-chip/

Wrong. Check his LinkedIn profile. He’s the co-founder, CEO, President & Chairman of the company. Are you saying he’s lying on his profile?
 
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