Graphical user interface for dynamically reconfiguring a programmable device

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 8533677
  • Patent Number
    8,533,677
  • Date Filed
    Friday, September 27, 2002
    21 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, September 10, 2013
    10 years ago
Abstract
Embodiments for an interface, system and method enabling dynamic reconfiguration of an electronic device are disclosed. The interface enables operations, such as adding or deleting a device configuration and switching between different device configuration views/workspaces. In some embodiments, the system and method apply global device parameter values to each device configuration and/or allow only valid or legal states for device configurations beyond the first configuration. In another embodiment, the electronic device includes a microprocessor, a plurality of internal peripherals, an interconnecting component, an external coupling port, and a memory for storing instructions. The plurality of internal peripherals, the interconnecting component and the external coupling port are programmably configurable to perform a variety of functions. The instructions stored by the memory facilitate dynamic reconfiguration of the electronic device. Based upon the existence of a predetermined condition, the electronic device is automatically reconfigured by activating different configuration images.
Description
RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application No. 09/989,817, filed Nov. 19, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,971,004, issued Nov. 29, 2005.


This application is related to co-pending commonly-owned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/033,027, filed Oct. 22, 2001, entitled “MICROCONTROLLER PROGRAMMABLE SYSTEM ON A CHIP,” U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/989,574, filed Nov. 19, 2001, entitled “METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR USING A GRAPHICS USER INTERFACE FOR PROGRAMMING AN ELECTRONIC DEVICE,” U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/989,570, filed Nov. 19, 2001, entitled “METHOD FOR FACILITATING MICROCONTROLLER PROGRAMMING,” U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/989,571, filed Nov. 19, 2001, entitled “METHOD FOR DESIGNING A CIRCUIT FOR PROGRAMMABLE MICROCONTROLLERS,” and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/989,817, filed Nov. 19, 2001, entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD OF DYNAMICALLY RECONFIGURING A PROGRAMMABLE SYSTEM ON A CHIP,” all of which are incorporated herein by reference.


FIELD OF THE INVENTION

Embodiments of the present invention generally relate to the field of software interfaces and methods for programming and/or developing integrated circuits. More specifically, embodiments of the present invention pertain to a graphical user interface (GUI) and method for programming a dynamically reconfigurable integrated circuit.


BACKGROUND

Electronic systems and circuits have made a significant contribution towards the advancement of modern society and are utilized in a number of applications to achieve advantageous results. Numerous electronic technologies such as digital computers, calculators, audio devices, video equipment, and telephone systems have facilitated increased productivity and reduced costs in analyzing and communicating data, ideas and trends in most areas of business, science, education and entertainment. Electronic systems designed to provide these benefits often include integrated circuits on a single substrate that provide a variety advantages over discrete component circuits. However, traditional design and manufacturing approaches for integrated circuits are often very complex and consume significant resources.


Electronic systems often rely upon a variety of components included in integrated circuits to provide numerous functions. Microcontrollers are one example of integrated circuit components with characteristics that are potentially useful in a variety of applications. For example, microcontrollers are typically reliable and relatively economical to produce. Microcontrollers have evolved since they were first introduced and have substantially replaced mechanical and electromechanical components in numerous applications and devices. However, while traditional microcontrollers have some characteristics that are advantageous, they also tend to be limited in the number of applications in which any given microcontroller integrated circuit can be utilized.


Traditionally each microcontroller is custom designed precisely for a narrow range of applications with a fixed combination of required peripheral functionalities. Developing custom microcontroller designs with particular fixed peripherals is time and resource intensive, typically requiring separate and dedicated manufacturing operations for each different microcontroller (which is particularly expensive for small volume applications). Even if a microcontroller may suffice for more than one application, the range of those applications may be somewhat limited. For example, completely different and totally separate integrated circuits are generally used for disparate applications such as monitoring ambient temperature over time and transmitting the time/temperature data to a remote location, or detecting light and controlling the operation of a motor, or playing an audio recording and receiving/checking digital security information.


Application specific integrated circuits (ASICs) may appear to address some of the above issues, but they can present significant hurdles. ASICs tend to require sophisticated design expertise, high development costs, and large volume requirements. To the extent some flexibility may be provided by the inclusion of gate arrays or other logic devices, the traditional approaches remain expensive and require a sophisticated level of design expertise. In addition, traditional integrated circuit configurations and configuration are typically set during initial manufacture and are not readily adaptable to changing conditions in the field.


Traditional integrated circuits typically have a predetermined set configuration and configuration that do not conveniently facilitate dynamic changes. Typically, one set of components is included and set to perform one function and a second set of components perform another function. Many applications require a variety of different functions, resulting in significantly increased resource commitments where the configuration is “hard-wired” into the design. Providing circuit components dedicated to single functions may results in less than the most efficient utilization of those dedicated components. For example, numerous functions in a variety of applications are performed infrequently or intermittently, and the valuable resources committed to these activities sit idle for much of the time. In addition, in some applications, functions are performed sequentially, with a second group of components dedicated to later activities sitting idle waiting on input from a first group of components dedicated to earlier activities, and when the first group of components has finished, they sit idle while the second group performs their dedicated function.


Similarly, the purpose of particular external ports or pins is typically fixed, and traditional systems typically dedicate external ports or pins to very precise, well-defined purposes. Accomplishing additional or different interactions with external components sometimes requires additional dedicated external ports or pins which consume valuable resources that are typically limited. Some dedicated external ports or pins may be utilized infrequently (e.g., only on start-up) and/or required to wait while activities proceed via other external ports or pins.


What is desired is an interface, system and method that enables dynamic reconfiguration of a programmable device in a convenient and efficient manner.


SUMMARY

The present invention relates to a GUI, system and method for programming a dynamically reconfigurable electronic device (e.g., a programmable mixed signal integrated circuit, such as a programmable microcontroller, data communications device or clock device). In one embodiment of the present invention, the GUI enables easy and efficient switching between different configurations while preserving and/or monitoring the validity of the different configuration states. In one exemplary embodiment, the present invention is implemented in software for dynamically programming different configurations and functions of a microcontroller having integrated, configurable analog and digital/mathematical blocks of circuitry. A plurality of different configuration images may be utilized to define the different configurations and functions and facilitate allocation of programmable components included in the electronic device accordingly.


In one embodiment, the GUI is used to program a microcontroller that further includes configurable analog and digital/mathematical blocks of circuitry, all on a single substrate. (The term “configurable digital/mathematical block of circuitry” as used herein refers to a configurable digital block of circuitry that has been at least partially optimized to perform a variety of mathematical functions, such as counting, incrementing, adding, subtracting, multiplying, dividing, etc.)


In a preferred embodiment, the microcontroller (which may be as described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/033,027, may further include a microprocessor, a plurality of internal peripherals, an interconnecting component, an external coupling port, and a memory for storing instructions. The microprocessor processes information. The plurality of internal peripherals (which may be configured from the configurable analog and digital/mathematical blocks of circuitry) are programmably configurable to perform a variety of functions associated with the microcontroller. The interconnecting component may be programmably configurable for selectively interconnecting the internal peripherals and other internal microcontroller components. The external coupling port may be programmably configurable to implement different connectability states by which the electronic system is connectable to an external device. The memory may store instructions and data (e.g., a configuration image) directed at setting the configurations and functions allocated to the plurality of internal peripherals, the interconnecting component and the external coupling port.





DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 is a box diagram showing a high-level architectural overview of an exemplary programmable device design/development software program and its primary components.



FIG. 2 is a screen view of a first configuration for an exemplary programmable device, as seen in a user module/datasheet view of the configuration editing subsystem component of FIG. 1.



FIG. 3 is a flow chart describing a basic dynamic reconfiguration process.



FIG. 4 is a screen view of the first configuration of FIG. 2, as seen in a pinout view of the configuration editing subsystem component of FIG. 1.



FIG. 5 is a screen view of the source code editing subsystem component of FIG. 1 for the exemplary programmable device of FIG. 2.



FIG. 6 shows a toolbar (GUI) configured for adding, deleting or switching between configurations in an exemplary dynamic reconfiguration process.



FIG. 7 shows an icon-based GUI for selecting between the different subsystems in the program of FIG. 1 and between different exemplary views of the configuration editing subsystem component of FIG. 1.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

Reference will now be made in detail to the preferred embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. While the invention will be described in conjunction with the preferred embodiments, it will be understood that they are not intended to limit the invention to these embodiments. On the contrary, the invention is intended to cover alternatives, modifications and equivalents, which may be included within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. Furthermore, in the following detailed description of the present invention, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. However, it will be readily apparent to one skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known methods, procedures, components, and circuits have not been described in detail so as not to unnecessarily obscure aspects of the present invention.


Some portions of the detailed descriptions which follow are presented in terms of procedures, logic blocks, processing, and other symbolic representations of operations on data bits within a computer, processor, controller and/or memory. These descriptions and representations are the means generally used by those skilled in data processing arts to effectively convey the substance of their work to others skilled in the art. A procedure, logic block, process, etc., is herein, and is generally, conceived to be a self-consistent sequence of steps or instructions leading to a desired result. The steps include physical manipulations of physical quantities. Usually, though not necessarily, these quantities take the form of electrical, magnetic, optical, or quantum signals capable of being stored, transferred, combined, compared, and otherwise manipulated in a computer system. It has proven convenient at times, principally for reasons of common usage, to refer to these signals as bits, values, elements, symbols, characters, terms, numbers, or the like.


It should be borne in mind, however, that all of these and similar terms are associated with the appropriate physical quantities and are merely convenient labels applied to these quantities. Unless specifically stated otherwise as apparent from the following discussions, it is appreciated that throughout the present application, discussions utilizing terms such as “processing”, “computing”, “calculating”, “determining”, “displaying” or the like, refer to the action and processes of a computer system, or similar processing device (e.g., an electrical, optical, or quantum, computing device), that manipulates and transforms data represented as physical (e.g., electronic) quantities. The terms refer to actions and processes of the processing devices that manipulate or transform physical quantities within a computer system's component (e.g., registers, memories, other such information storage, transmission or display devices, etc.) into other data similarly represented as physical quantities within other components.


The present invention concerns an interface, method and system for dynamically (re)programming a programmable electronic device, comprising one or more configuration workspaces for configuring the programmable electronic device such that it has different functionalities at different times, and a separate “reconfiguration operations” workspace for adding, deleting, opening, closing, importing, exporting, saving and/or selecting a configuration and/or its corresponding workspace. The graphical depiction of a particular device configuration in a workspace on the screen or monitor of a general purpose computer or PC configured to run a software tool that includes the present interface is sometimes referred to as an “overlay.”


For a given reprogrammable device having different time-multiplexed configurations and/or functionality, the software tool that designs, programs or configures each such configuration and/or functionality will have a number of viewing screens, windows or workspaces corresponding to the number of device configurations and/or functionalities. The view screen(s), window(s) or workspace(s) corresponding to a given/unique device configuration and/or functionality may sometimes be known as an “overlay.” Thus, the software design, program, data file set or configuration(s) for a given reprogrammable device having different time-multiplexed configurations and/or functionality (a so-called “project”) may contain multiple overlays.


Each overlay may be considered to be a hardware design within the programmable electronic device that exists at a given point in time to perform a given function. One overlay may be replaced or augmented (or partially replaced and partially augmented) by another overlay within the same project, to enable the device to perform two different functions (or have two different performance capabilities) at two different times. The two overlays map onto the same hardware resources in the device, and therefore, should be (and preferably are) time-multiplexed (i.e., operable in the device at mutually exclusive times, or configured such that at most one overlay is operable in the device at any given time). As a result, different functions and/or performance capabilities can be time-multiplexed within a single (re)programmable device by virtue of different overlays (e.g., different configuration data sets) that may be stored in memory that is in communication with the device. In the present system, such memory (which may be volatile, such as dynamic and/or static random access memory, non-volatile, such as EPROM, EEPROM, or flash memory, or both) is preferably on the same die as the electronic device (i.e., is monolithic).


In one embodiment, the programmable electronic device can be reconfigured dynamically; e.g., the different configurations and/or functionalities may be swapped or switched (partially or fully) “on the fly.” At one instant in time, the device can configured using a first set of partially or fully programmed (and optionally pre-programmed) modules to transmit electrical signals (an exemplary “first overlay”), then within the time a processor takes to unload and load a set of registers or register banks, the same device can be reprogrammed with a second set of partially or fully programmed (and optionally pre-programmed) modules to receive electrical data signals (an exemplary “second overlay”).


The present invention relates to an interface, system and method that enables such dynamic reconfiguration of a programmable electronic device, notably through software tools, operations, instructions and/or code that allows one to design, configure, create or modify multiple overlays or configurations, the active states of which are operably time-multiplexed in the device. For example, within a module or component placement and/or configuration workspace displayed by such software operating in a suitable computing environment, one may switch back and forth between different overlays to easily compare functional and/or performance (parameter value) similarities and differences between the different overlays. Thus, in a preferred embodiment in the present interface and system provides the first configuration with instructions, programming and/or information sufficient to enable reconfiguration of the device from said first configuration to said second, different configuration.


In a preferred embodiment, a tool having such a “reconfiguration operation” GUI for operating on overlays within a project created with the tool can also compute the hardware resources that are shared and/or that are different and/or not compatible between the different overlays. Such capability is useful because it enables the programmer to reprogram only those features, parameters and/or hardware resources that differ between the different overlays. Resources, features and/or parameters that are common to the different overlays need not be reprogrammed.


The present invention is related to several U.S. patent applications which are incorporate herein by reference. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/033,027, filed Oct. 22, 2001, entitled “MICROCONTROLLER PROGRAMMABLE SYSTEM ON A CHIP,” describes a programmable microcontroller having configurable analog and digital blocks of circuitry that solves a number of the above-described obstacles. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/989,570, filed Nov. 19, 2001, entitled “METHOD FOR FACILITATING MICROCONTROLLER PROGRAMMING,” describes a method, interface, software and system for designing and/or programming a circuit (such as a microcontroller) having configurable, programmable functions that can be embodied in configurable analog and/or digital blocks. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/989,571, filed Nov. 19, 2001, entitled “METHOD FOR DESIGNING A CIRCUIT FOR PROGRAMMABLE MICROCONTROLLERS,” describes a methodology, interface, software and system by which a user programs and/or configures a programmable microcontroller having configurable and/or programmable functions that can be embodied in configurable analog and/or digital blocks of circuitry.


U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/989,574, filed Nov. 19, 2001, entitled “METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR USING A GRAPHICS USER INTERFACE FOR PROGRAMMING AN ELECTRONIC DEVICE,” describes a method, system and GUI for programming and/or configuring such a programmable microcontroller. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/989,817, filed Nov. 19, 2001, entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD OF DYNAMICALLY RECONFIGURING A PROGRAMMABLE SYSTEM ON A CHIP,” describes an improved programmable electronic device wherein instructions stored in memory facilitate dynamic reconfiguration of the device. Based upon the existence of a predetermined condition, the electronic device is automatically reconfigured by activating different configuration images.



FIG. 1 is a block-level overview of an exemplary software program or tool 2 for designing, configuring and/or programming a programmable electronic device, such as a mixed signal integrated circuit having configurable analog and/or digital circuit/function blocks (see, e.g., U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/033,027.


In a preferred embodiment, the tool 2 is exemplified by PSoC Designer™ software (for designing and/or configuring programmable analog and/or digital functional blocks and/or modules of circuitry in a programmable integrated circuit; see version 3.10, available from Cypress MicroSystems, Inc., Bothell, Wash., or from the world wide web at http://www.cypressmicro.com/).


Tool 2 may contain one or more component subsystems: a device configuration editing subsystem 4 (known as “Device Editor” in PSoC Designer™ software), a source code editing subsystem 6 (known as “Application Editor” in PSoC Designer™ software), and a debugging subsystem 8 (known as “Debugger” in PSoC Designer™ software). A preferred embodiment of the present system comprises at least device configuration editing subsystem 4. Source code editing subsystem 6 enables further customization of device configurations and operation(s), and debugging subsystem 8 enables testing of device configuration(s) and/or programming. Thus, although preferred, subsystems 6 and 8 are optional in the present invention. For detailed descriptions of particularly preferred, working embodiments of device configuration editing subsystem 4, source code editing subsystem 6, and debugging subsystem 8, see the PSoC Designer IDE User Guide, version 1.13 (available from Cypress MicroSystems, Inc., Bothell, Wash., or from the world wide web at http://www.cypressmicro.com/).



FIG. 2 shows an exemplary functional block or module “selection” view 10 within configuration editing subsystem 4 of tool 2 in FIG. 1. (For a general description of an exemplary configuration editing subsystem 4, see, e.g., U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 09/989,570 and 09/989,571, each of which was filed Nov. 19, 2001.) In FIG. 2, the present interface is embodied in toolbar 12, which is sometimes referred to herein as a “reconfiguration operation” toolbar, and tabs 14a and 14b, which are sometimes referred to herein as “overlay” or “configuration” tabs. Alternatively (or additionally), the present interface can be implemented as a dropdown list in box 20 (which, as shown, may be contained within workspace 12) and/or as one or more commands (each of which may optionally contain one or more subcommands) under a heading in menu 16, such as “Config” 18.


The configuration workspace(s) in the present graphical user interface may contain commands, operations and/or instructions for adding a new or existing configuration, deleting an existing or open configuration, saving an open configuration, importing a saved configuration, exporting a completed configuration, and/or selecting between at least first and second configurations. Preferably, the commands and/or operations carried out through the interface comprise adding a configuration, deleting a configuration, and selecting a different configuration, more preferably further including importing a configuration and exporting a configuration.


Referring now to FIG. 6, toolbar 12 comprises a plurality of icons 402 and 404 and down-arrow box 406. Icons 402 and 404 carry out reconfiguration operations, such as adding a new configuration (e.g., icon 402) or deleting an open configuration (e.g., icon 404). These icons are not required to practice the present invention; menu- and down-arrow-based alternatives are described elsewhere herein. Additional or alternative icons can be added or substituted for additional or other commands, functions or operations. Down-arrow box 406, when activated by clicking on down-arrow 408, explodes into a list (not shown) containing the names of all overlays in the project. Optionally, this “down-arrow list” may further include a selection/entry for a new configuration (e.g., “[New Config]”). It is noted that the overlay shown in down-arrow box 406, named “Second_PWM,” differs from the overlay shown in down-arrow box 20 in FIG. 2 (from a working embodiment; see elsewhere herein for details).



FIG. 3 is a flow chart of dynamic reconfiguration method 100, one embodiment of the present invention. In step 102, a first configuration (or “overlay”) is loaded or created in a first (configuration and/or placement) workspace. The workspace(s) for configuring, designing, developing or modifying an overlay may have a plurality of different subworkspaces (in FIG. 2, see, e.g., [preconfigured] user module selection workspace 22, user module configuration workspace 24), each of which may have a plurality of different selectable views (in FIG. 2, see, e.g., tabs 26a-26g).


At any point (but preferably after the first configuration/overlay has been loaded and/or is otherwise completed and/or functionally operable), in step 104, one may activate (e.g., open, add or select) a new configuration in a second (e.g., “reconfiguration operation”) workspace. Preferably, the software tool is configured (using conventional techniques) such that the first configuration or overlay defines a set of valid (e.g., allowed, permissible and/or legal) states for the second, new configuration or overlay. Conversely, the software tool is also preferably configured (using conventional techniques) such that the first configuration or overlay enables a highlighting or alerting function in the second, new overlay when an invalid configuration or state (e.g., not allowed, impermissible and/or illegal) is entered, designed, programmed or configured therein.


In step 106, one configures (e.g., creates, designs, develops, loads and/or modifies) the second (or next incremental) configuration or overlay for the device in a third (or next incremental) configuration or placement workspace. The workspace for the second (or next incremental) configuration or overlay may occupy the same or different display area as the workspace for the first (or any previous) configuration or overlay. Preferably, the default workspace areas for each overlay are coextensive (i.e., the same). However, and preferably, a user may adjust the workspace boundaries for a given overlay in a project as desired. Thus, the workspaces for different overlays may not necessarily coincide, and they can be adjusted or modified such that two or more overlays are partially or completely visible (but, preferably, only one configuration workspace at a time is active, to avoid potential automatic source code generation errors).


Decision point 108 is where the user decides whether to create a new, incremental overlay. If, for example, after two overlays have been created, the user determines that all desired time-multiplexed device functionalities in the project have been loaded, imported, created and/or added, the user is done. On the other hand, for example, if the user determines that, after two overlays have been created, more time-multiplexed device functionalities are desired in the project, the user may return to step 104 and activate a new, incremental overlay in the second (reconfiguration operation) workspace. The cycle of steps 104, 106 and 108 may be repeated as often as the user likes, until all of the desired time-multiplexed device functionalities, configurations and/or performance capabilities have been designed into the project.


In one embodiment of the present invention, the configuration images are provided by a design tool (e.g., a computer implemented software design tool). Additional details on an exemplary implementation of a present invention design tool are set forth in co-pending commonly-owned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/989,570 filed Nov. 19, 2001, entitled “METHOD FOR FACILITATING MICROCONTROLLER PROGRAMMING”, which is incorporated herein by reference, and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/989,819 filed Nov. 19, 2001, entitled “A SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR CREATING A BOOT FILE UTILIZING A BOOT TEMPLATE”, also incorporated herein by reference.


In one further embodiment, the design process embodied in design program 2 (FIG. 1) and the reconfiguration development process 100 (FIG. 3) may be carried out by a computer system under the control of computer-readable and computer-executable instructions directed at implementing such a process. One embodiment of an exemplary computer system utilized to implement design tool process 400 is set forth in incorporated U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/989,570, filed Nov. 19, 2001, entitled “METHOD FOR FACILITATING MICROCONTROLLER PROGRAMMING”. The computer-readable and computer-executable instructions reside, for example, in data storage features of the computer system such as a computer usable volatile memory, computer-usable non-volatile memory and/or data storage device. The computer-readable and computer-executable instructions direct the computer system operation (e.g., a processor) in accordance with the process of design tool 2 and/or dynamic reconfiguration flow 100.


Although specific steps are disclosed in process 100 of FIG. 3, such steps are exemplary. That is, the present invention is well suited to use with various other steps or variations of the steps recited in process 100. Additionally, for purposes of clarity and brevity, the discussion is directed at times to specific examples. The present invention, design tool 2 and/or process 100, however, are not limited to designing a sole particular target device (e.g., a mixed signal device and/or microcontroller). Instead, the present invention is well suited to use with other types of computer-aided hardware and software design systems in which it may be desirable to accomplish a multitude of tasks as part of an overall process directed at designing an electronic device.


One aspect of the invention described herein includes the generation of automatic interrupts and/or “API's,” by the software tool that contains, configures and/or controls the present interface. The interrupts and/or “API's,” load, unload and/or reload the device registers, effectively reprogramming and/or reconfiguring the device to conform with a different overlay. Each overlay contains a set of instructions, tables and/or data (which may be compiled from one or more sets of corresponding instructions, tables and/or data in one or more user modules incorporated into the overlay) that generate the API's in accordance with the programming and/or configuration in the overlay. For example, if a first overlay defines an event monitor (e.g., a temperature or light sensor), then that first overlay is configured to generate an API when the event being monitored occurs. At that point, the API unloads the first overlay and loads a second overlay (which may be a data transmitter, UART or modem that reports the occurrence of the event). Alternatively, an API can be generated from a preset timer (for which a variety of user modules exist), for applications in which collection and/or reporting of data at specific time intervals is desired.


EXAMPLE

PSoC Designer software (version 3.10, dated Apr. 16, 2002; for designing and/or configuring programmable analog and/or digital functional blocks and/or modules of circuitry in a programmable integrated circuit) was downloaded from the Cypress MicroSystems, Inc., web site (at http://www.cypressmicro.com/) onto a Gateway Solo laptop computer having at least the minimum requirements for installing and operating the software. The software was installed according to the provider's instructions. After rebooting to allow new computer settings to take effect, the PSoC Designer software was launched and the “Dynamic PWM example” project (time-multiplexed pulse width modulator) was loaded.


The PSoC Designer IDE User Guide, version 1.13, was also downloaded onto the Gateway Solo laptop computer. Section 6 of the User Guide was consulted for reference to dynamic reconfiguration.


Dynamic reconfiguration allows for microcontroller applications to dynamically load and unload configurations. With this feature, a single MCU can have multiple functions. Upon installing and launching an appropriate version of software that contains dynamic reconfiguration capabilities, an example project that has multiple configurations was selected.


In the Start dialog box, a subsystem icon (preferably Device Editor) was selected by clicking on the icon, and C:\Program Files\Cypress Micro-Systems\Designer\Examples\Example_Dynamic_PWM\Example_Dynamic_PWM.SOC was opened. Using the example project, features of dynamic reconfiguration were sampled.


Adding a Configuration


To add a loadable configuration to the project, the following steps were executed (the designer, device editor, and target project files/workspaces were open). From the menu, Config>>Loadable Configuration>>New were clicked/selected. Alternatively, the “New Configuration” (left-most) icon 402 in the dynamic reconfiguration toolbar 12 was clicked (see FIG. 6). The name of the new configuration is Config1 (and each additional configuration will take on consecutive numbering, i.e., Config2, Config3, Config4, etc.).


Upon the addition of a new configuration, a new tab 406 appeared directly below the dynamic reconfiguration toolbar 404, and a drop-arrow selection 408 appeared in the dynamic reconfiguration toolbar 404, both bearing the name Config1. The different project configurations were selected (or “moved between”) by clicking on the corresponding tabs. Whichever tab is selected dictates the project configuration, regardless of the view. All views showed the settings or configuration for the project configuration of the current tab.


There is at least one tab with the project name when a project is created. This tab represents the base configuration and has special characteristics. In this embodiment of the software, the base configuration cannot be deleted but can be exported. Any new configuration, by default, has global settings and pin settings identical to the base configuration.


The configuration name (to be configuration or project specific) was changed by double-clicking (or right-clicking) the tab 406 and typing the new name. The new name appeared on the tab 406 and in the drop-arrow selection 408 in the dynamic reconfiguration toolbar 404. The configuration corresponding to that named in the tab 406 (and drop-arrow selection 408) now was the currently “loaded” working configuration.


The configuration process (i.e., selecting and placing user modules, setting up parameters, and specifying pinout) was conducted according to the procedures defined elsewhere in the PSoC Designer IDE User Guide, version 1.13, the relevant portions of which are incorporated by reference herein, and described generally in copending U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 09/989,570 and 09/989,571, each of which was filed Nov. 19, 2001.


To avoid confusion in code generation, user module instance names should be unique across all configurations (i.e., a user module name in one configuration should not be re-used in a different configuration). Otherwise, the functions of all other icons and menu items in the software are identical to projects that do not employ additional configurations. In this embodiment of the software, additional configuration tabs appear in alphabetical order from left to right (beginning after the base configuration tab).


Importing a Configuration


In order to import an existing configuration (e.g., a .cfg file), the desired configuration to be imported must have been previously exported (i.e., the .cfg file generated). See the “Exporting a Configuration” section below for details. To import a loadable configuration to a project using dynamic reconfiguration, the following steps are executed (the designer, device editor, and target project files/workspaces were open):

    • 1. From the menu, Config>>Loadable Configuration>>Import were each selected.
    • 2. In the Import Loadable Configuration dialog box, the .cfg file to be imported was located (i.e., to be added to the open project). One may also specify whether to auto-load configuration information, which is done (in this embodiment, checked) by default.
    • 3. “OK” was clicked.


Once the configuration was imported (added), it was loaded and ready for further developing, manipulating and/or configuring.


Exporting a Configuration


To export a loadable configuration from a project (to later be imported to a different project), the following steps were executed (the designer, device editor, and target project files/workspaces were open):

    • 1. From the menu, Config>>Loadable Configuration>>Export were each selected/clicked.
    • 2. In the Export Loadable Configuration dialog box, the configuration, by name, to be exported was selected/clicked (to be later imported to a project). One may select all configurations by holding the [Shift] key and dragging the mouse down, or alternatively, certain specific configurations may be selected by holding the [Ctrl] key and clicking only those desired configurations.
    • 3. “OK” was clicked.
    • 4. In the Save Loadable Configuration dialog box, the configuration name was typed and the file path designated. In this embodiment, notes could be added for later reference.
    • 5. “OK” was clicked.


These steps created an exported configuration (e.g., a .cfg file) that can now be imported (added) to another project (see, e.g., “Importing a Configuration” above for details).


Deleting a Configuration


To delete a loadable configuration from your project, the following steps were executed (the designer, device editor, and target project files/workspaces were open):

    • 1. From the menu, Config>>Loadable Configuration>>Delete were clicked. Alternatively, the “Delete Configuration” icon 404 (see FIG. 6) could be clicked, or tab 14a or 14b (see FIG. 2) of the configuration to be deleted could be right-clicked and “Delete” selected.
    • 2. Once deleting the configuration was selected, the software asked to confirm the selection. “Yes” was clicked. (Alternatively, to cancel the “delete” operation, one may click “No.”)


Once a configuration is deleted, the associated source files are removed from the project (if application files had been generated).


Global Parameters and Dynamic Reconfiguration


When employing dynamic reconfiguration, global parameters are set in the same manner as in a project having a single configuration. However, in this example of dynamic reconfiguration, changes to base configuration global parameters were propagated by default to all additional configurations. Therefore, global parameter changes made to an additional configuration are done locally to only that particular configuration. The code generation operation (Application Generation icon 28 in FIG. 2) considered global parameter changes made to some, but not all, configurations to determine compatibility issues and the possibility of invalid states between the different configurations. These so-called “local” global parameter changes should be made cautiously to prevent unexpected configuration incompatibility issues.


Pin Settings and Dynamic Reconfiguration


When employing dynamic reconfiguration, port pin settings are similar to global parameters in that all settings in the base configuration are propagated to additional configurations. When manually set, port pin settings become local to the configuration.


Port Pin Interrupts


To enable port pin settings that are local to a particular configuration, port pin interrupts are created. To set port pin interrupts, execute the following steps:

    • 1. The Pin-out View mode 200 of the device editor workspace was accessed by clicking on icon 202 in toolbar 204 (see FIG. 4).
    • 2. The drop-arrow item 408 or tab 14a/14b was selected that corresponds to the configuration view for which port pin interrupts were to be set.
    • 3. The pin interrupt was set in either of two places: (a) in the Pin Parameter Grid 206 (see FIG. 4), under the Interrupt column 208; or (b) through the pop-up menu (not shown) that appears when a pin (e.g., 212) in the pin-out diagram 210 is clicked.
    • In the Pin Parameter Grid 206, the drop-down list was accessed by clicking the drop-arrow (not shown) in the Interrupt column 208 and highlighting a selection. In the pop-up menu (not shown) on diagram 210, the interrupt setting appears in a list along with the select and drive options. Clicking the Port Pin Interrupt option enables the same drop-arrow selection as in the Pin Parameter Grid 206. A choice is selected by double-clicking.


The default pin interrupt setting is “Disable.” In this embodiment, if all pin interrupts are set to “Disable,” there is no additional code generated for the pin interrupts. If at least one pin is set to a value other than “Disable,” code generation performs some additional operations. In boot.asm, the vector table is modified so that the GPIO interrupt vector has an entry with the name ProjectName_GPIO_ISR. Additional files (e.g., PSoCGPIOINT.asm and PSoCGPIOINT.inc) are generated as necessary and/or desired.


PSoCGPIOINT.asm contains an export and a placeholder label so the appropriate pin interrupt handling code can be entered. This file is generated once and treated in a similar way to the user module interrupt source files in that they are generated once, and then are not overwritten in subsequent code generation cycles.


PSoCGPIOINT.inc contains equates that are useful in writing the pin interrupt handling code. For each pin (with enabled interrupt or custom name), a set of equates are generated that define symbols for (i) the data address and bit, and (ii) the interrupt mask address and bit associated with the pin. In this embodiment, the naming convention for the equates is:

    • CustomPinName_Data_ADDR
    • CustomPinName_MASK
    • CustomPinName_IntEn_ADDR
    • CustomPinName_Bypass_ADDR
    • CustomPinName_DriveMode_0_ADDR
    • CustomPinName_DriveMode_1_ADDR
    • CustomPinName_IntCtrl_0_ADDR
    • CustomPinName_IntCtrl_1_ADDR


The CustomPinName is replaced by the name entered for the pin during code generation. Custom pin naming allows one to change the name of the pin. The name field is included in the pin parameter area of the pin-out diagram.


The Name column in the Pin Parameter Grid 602 shows the names assigned to each of the pins. The default name shows the port and bit number. The name field may be double-clicked and the custom name typed in. In this embodiment, the name cannot include embedded spaces. The pin name is primarily used in code generation when the pin interrupt is enabled. The pin name may be appended to the equates that are used to represent the address and bit position associated with the pin for interrupt enabling and disabling, as well as testing the state of the port data.


Code Generation and Dynamic Reconfiguration


When more than one configuration is present in a project, there is a considerable difference in code generation and the files generated, although the user module files may be generated identically to previous versions. Differences are described below.


PSoCConfig.asm


The static PSoCConfig.asm file contains exports and code for:

    • LoadConfigInit: Initial configuration-loading function
    • LoadConfig_projectname: Load configuration function


and code only for:

    • LoadConfig: General load registers from a table


For projects with more than one configuration, a variable is added to the bottom of the file that tracks the configurations that are loaded. The LoadConfig function does not change at all. The LoadConfig_projectname function includes a line that sets the appropriate bit in the active configuration status variable. The name of this variable is fixed for all projects. Additional variables that shadow the “write only” registers are added when useful and/or needed.


Additional functions named LoadConfig_configurationname are generated with exports that load the respective configuration. These functions are the equivalent of the LoadConfig_projectname function, including the setting of the bit in the active configuration status variable. The only difference is that LoadConfig_configurationname loads values from LoadConfigTBL_configurationname_Bankn, and there is some additional code that manages the values of any global registers that are changed in the configuration relative to the base configuration.


For each LoadConfig_xxx function, an UnloadConfig_xxx function is generated and exported to unload each configuration, including the base configuration. The UnloadConfig_xxx_Bankn operations are similar to the LoadConfig_xxx functions except that they load an UnloadConfigTBL_xxx_Bankn register (or register set or bank) and clear a bit in the active configuration status variable. In these functions, the global registers are restored to a state that depends on the currently active configuration.


With regard to the base configuration, UnloadConfig_xxx and ReloadConfig_xxx functions are also generated. These functions load and unload only user modules contained in the base configuration. When the base configuration is unloaded, the ReloadConfig_xxx function must be used to restore the base configuration user modules. The ReloadConfig_xxx function ensures the integrity of the “write only” shadow registers. Respective load tables are generated for these functions in PSoCConfigTBL.asm.


An additional unload function is generated as UnloadConfig_Total, which loads tables UnloadConfigTBL_Total_Bank0 and UnloadConfigTBL_Total_Bank1. These tables include the unload registers and values for all blocks. The active configuration status variable is also set to 0. The global registers are not set by this function.


The name of the base configuration matches the name of the project. The project name changes to match the base configuration name if the name of the base configuration is changed from the project name.


A “C” callable version of each function is defined and exported so that these functions can be called from a “C” program.


PSoCConfigTBL.asm


PSoCConfigTBL.asm contains the personalization data tables used by the functions defined in PSoCConfig.asm. For static configurations, there are only two tables defined: LoadConfigTBL_projectname_Bank0 and LoadConfigTBL_projectname_Bank1, which support the LoadConfig_projectname function. These tables personalize the entire global register set and all registers associated with blocks that are used by user modules placed in the project.


For projects with additional configurations, a pair of tables are generated for each LoadConfig_xxx function generated in PSoCConfig.asm. The naming convention follows the same pattern as LoadConfig_xxx and uses two tables: LoadConfigTBL_xxx_Bank0 and LoadConfigTBL_xxx_Bank1. UnloadConfigTBL_xxx_Bank0 and UnloadConfigTBL_xxx_Bank1 are used by UnloadConfig_xxx. The labels for these tables are exported at the top of the file.


The tables for the additional configurations' loading function differ from the base configuration load table in that the additional configuration tables only include those registers associated with blocks that are used by user modules placed in the project and only those global registers with settings that differ from the base configuration. If the additional configuration has no changes to the global parameters or pin settings, only the placed user module registers are included in the tables.


The tables for additional configurations' unloading functions include registers that deactivate any blocks that were used by placed user modules, and all global registers which were modified when the configuration was loaded. The registers and the values for the blocks are determined by a list in the device description for bitfields to set when unloading a user module, and are set according to the type of block. The exceptions are the UnloadConfigTBL_Total_Bankn tables, which include the registers for unloading all blocks.


boot.asm


The boot.asm file is generated similarly to a project that has no additional configurations unless there are one or more configurations that have user modules placed in such a way that common interrupt vectors are used between configurations. In this case, the vector entry in the interrupt vector table will show the line “ljmp Dispatch_INTERRUPT_n” instead of a user module defined Interrupt Service Routine.


New Files


There are three new files that are generated when additional configurations are present in a project (while the exemplary file names given below may be changed, the corresponding functions will be the same regardless of the actual file names used):

    • PSoCDynamic.inc
    • PSoCDynamic.asm
    • PSoCDynamicINT.asm


The PSoCDynamic.inc file contains a set of equates that represent the bit position in the active configuration status variable, and the offset to index the byte in which the status bit resides if the number of configurations exceeds eight. A third equate for each configuration indicates an integer index representing the ordinal value of the configuration.


The PSoCDynamic.asm file contains exports and functions that test whether a configuration is loaded or not. The naming convention for these functions is IsOverlayNameLoaded.


The PSoCDynamicINT.asm file is generated only when the user module placement between configurations results in both configurations using a common interrupt vector. The reference to Dispatch_INTERRUPT_n function is resolved in this file. For each conflicting interrupt vector, one of these ISR dispatch sets is generated. The ISR dispatch has a code section that tests the configuration that is active and loads the appropriate table offset into a jump table immediately following the code. The length of the jump table and the number of tests depends on the number of user modules that need the common vector rather than the total number of configurations. The number of conflicts can equal the number of configurations if each configuration utilizes the common interrupt vector. Generally, there will be fewer interrupt conflicts on a per vector basis.


The Application (Source Code) Editor Workspace and Dynamic Reconfiguration


The application (e.g., source code) editor (see, e.g., FIG. 5) operates essentially as set forth in the PSoC Designer IDE User Guide, version 1.13, and as described generally in copending U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 09/989,570 and 09/989,571, each of which was filed Nov. 19, 2001. The additional files generated are placed in the Library Source and Library Headers folders of the source tree. Library source files that are associated with an additional configuration are shown under a folder with the name of the configuration. This partitions the files so that the source tree view is not excessively long.


The Debugger Workspace and Dynamic Reconfiguration


A debugging subsystem in the downloaded software now displays currently loaded configuration names and input/output (I/O) register labels during debugging halts. The I/O register grid labels are compiled from the labels for all currently loaded configurations.


The names of loaded configurations are displayed in a new debugging view (see, e.g., menu item 30 in FIG. 2). The new view is a new tab titled “Config” below the memory map (which already contains RAM, I/O Banks 0,1, and Flash tabs).


The I/O register labels modify the existing I/O register bank grids. In addition to setting I/O register labels on entry to the debugger workspace, labels are updated on M8C (microcontroller) halts if the set of loaded user modules has changed since the last halt.


The debugger workspace obtains the active configuration names from the runtime configuration data stored in M8C RAM. This data is maintained by the “LoadConfig” and “UnloadConfig” routines generated by the Device Editor software.


Active Configuration Display


The set of currently active configurations is displayed in the “Config” tab of the memory map during debugging software halts. The display lists all project configurations with the status for each currently loaded configuration marked “Active.” The display may not be valid immediately after a reset. In this embodiment, the initialization code must run before the “Config” tab display is valid.


Active Configuration I/O Register Labels


The debugging software I/O register bank labels (Bank 0, Bank 1) are updated to match the user modules defined in the currently active configurations.


Active Configuration Limitations


The new displays are based on a bitmap of loaded configurations maintained by the “LoadConfig” and “UnloadConfig” routines, which are generated by the Device Editor software. This bitmap can get out-of-sync with the actual device con-figuration in several ways:

    • The bitmap's RAM area can be accidentally overwritten.
    • Overlapping (conflicting) configurations, loaded at the same time, may scramble the register labels.
    • If an overlapping configuration is loaded and then unloaded, register labels from the original configuration may be used, even though some blocks will have been cleared by the last “UnloadConfig” routine.


Active Configuration Display Test


The new display features can be tested with a single project that loads and unloads configurations containing overlapping user modules. The test project should have a base configuration that defines one or more user modules and several overlay configurations, some conflicting and some not conflicting. The test project should load and unload configurations in various combinations. After each load and unload operation, the status of the active configuration display and the register label display should be checked.


Checking the displays after loading and unloading conflicting configurations is recommended.


CONCLUSION/SUMMARY

Thus, the present invention provides a convenient, simple and efficient interface for dynamically configuring an electronic device (e.g., a mixed signal integrated circuit such as a microcontroller).


The foregoing descriptions of specific embodiments of the present invention have been presented for purposes of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed, and obviously many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application, to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention and various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the Claims appended hereto and their equivalents.

Claims
  • 1. An electronic computer system for enabling dynamic reconfiguration of a programmable electronic device, comprising: a) a first graphical user interface (GUI) workspace including a set of functions and a plurality of user selectable views, said first GUI generated responsive to user interaction to create in said first GUI workspace on a screen display having a first configuration of the programmable electronic device comprising configurable analog and digital circuit blocks;b) a second GUI workspace activated in response to user selection of a screen display icon, tab, an item from a pulldown menu or a down-arrow list of a reconfiguration operation toolbar, to create another screen display of a third GUI workspace having the same or a subset of said functions of said first workspace in an alternative second configuration;c) said GUI third workspace including a plurality of user selectable views and user interactive capabilities, programming, operations and information provided by said GUI for configuring said alternative second configuration for said programmable electronic device comprising configurable analog circuit blocks and configurable digital circuit blocks, wherein said first and alternative second configurations have a same pin out;d) said electronic computer system operable to compute and indicate hardware resources that are shared, resources that are different or resources that are not compatible between said first configuration and said alternative second configuration; ande) tangible storage to store said first and said alternative second configurations for loading to said programmable electronic device.
  • 2. The electronic computer system of claim 1, wherein said second GUI workspace comprises means for adding, deleting, saving, importing, exporting and selecting a configuration.
  • 3. The electronic computer system of claim 1, wherein said first GUI workspace comprises a first set of configurability functions and parameter values, said third GUI workspace comprises a second set of configurability functions and parameter values, and said second set of configurability functions and parameter values contains at least a subset of the first set of configurability functions and parameter values.
  • 4. The electronic computer system of claim 1, further comprising a fourth GUI workspace for configuring the electronic device such that it has a third configuration at a third time.
  • 5. The system of claim 1, wherein said third GUI workspace has a first view that is superimposable onto a corresponding second view in said first GUI workspace.
  • 6. The system of claim 1, wherein said first configuration contains global device parameter values, said alternative second configuration contains local device parameter values, and said local device parameter values contain at least a subset of said global device parameter values.
  • 7. A non-transitory computer readable storage media having computer executable instructions stored thereon that when executed by a computer aided design system cause the computing device to perform a method comprising: a) interacting with a first workspace of a graphical user interface (GUI) in a computer system to define a screen display of a first configuration of a programmable electronic device comprising a plurality of configurable analog circuit blocks and a plurality of configurable digital circuit blocks, said first workspace including a set of selectable functions and selectable views for configuring said configurable analog circuit blocks and said configurable digital circuit blocks, wherein said first configuration also defines a set of valid and invalid states for a second alternative configuration for said programmable electronic device;b) interacting with the GUI in a second workspace, said interacting including selecting an icon, a tab, an item from a pulldown menu or a down-arrow list of a reconfiguration operation toolbar, to enable reconfiguration of said programmable electronic device by interaction with the GUI in a third workspace comprising a plurality of selectable views and having the same or a subset of functions of said first workspace;c) selectively interacting with at least one of: capabilities, programming, operations, or information provided by said GUI and interacting with the plurality of selectable views comprising the third workspace of the GUI to define and create a screen display of said alternative second configuration for said programmable electronic device comprising configurable analog circuit blocks and configurable digital circuit blocks, said alternative second configuration having a same pinout as a pinout of the first configuration;d) computing hardware resources that are shared, resources that are different or resources that are not compatible between said first configuration and said second configuration, wherein said computing is performed in the electronic system; ande) storing said first and alternative second configurations in a computer system.
  • 8. The computer-readable storage media of claim 7 wherein said third workspace is superimposable on said first workspace.
  • 9. The computer-readable storage media of claim 7 wherein a)-c) are performed by a software design tool operable on a general purpose computer system.
  • 10. The computer-readable storage media of claim 7, including storing said first and said alternative second configurations in memory of a programmable electronic device for programming selective operation of said programmable electronic device alternatively in said first configuration or in said second configuration.
  • 11. The computer-readable storage media of claim 10, wherein the first and alternative second configurations include instructions effective to reconfigure the programmable electronic device from said first configuration to said alternative second configuration in response to occurrence of a predetermined event.
US Referenced Citations (1172)
Number Name Date Kind
3600690 White Aug 1971 A
3725804 Langan Apr 1973 A
3740588 Stratton et al. Jun 1973 A
3805245 Brooks et al. Apr 1974 A
3810036 Bloedorn May 1974 A
3831113 Ahmed Aug 1974 A
3845328 Hollingsworth Oct 1974 A
3940760 Brokaw Feb 1976 A
4061987 Nagahama Dec 1977 A
4134073 MacGregor Jan 1979 A
4138671 Comer et al. Feb 1979 A
4176258 Jackson Nov 1979 A
4250464 Schade, Jr. Feb 1981 A
4272760 Prazak et al. Jun 1981 A
4283713 Philipp Aug 1981 A
4326135 Jarrett et al. Apr 1982 A
4344067 Lee Aug 1982 A
4380083 Andersson et al. Apr 1983 A
4438404 Philipp Mar 1984 A
4475151 Philipp Oct 1984 A
4497575 Philipp Feb 1985 A
4571507 Collings Feb 1986 A
4604363 Newhouse et al. Aug 1986 A
4608502 Dijkmans et al. Aug 1986 A
4656603 Dunn Apr 1987 A
4670838 Kawata Jun 1987 A
4689740 Moelands et al. Aug 1987 A
4692718 Roza et al. Sep 1987 A
4701907 Collins Oct 1987 A
4727541 Mori et al. Feb 1988 A
4736097 Philipp Apr 1988 A
4740966 Goad Apr 1988 A
4755766 Metz Jul 1988 A
4773024 Faggin et al. Sep 1988 A
4794558 Thompson Dec 1988 A
4802103 Faggin et al. Jan 1989 A
4802119 Heene et al. Jan 1989 A
4807183 Kung et al. Feb 1989 A
4809345 Tabata et al. Feb 1989 A
4812684 Yamagiwa et al. Mar 1989 A
4813013 Dunn Mar 1989 A
4827401 Hrustich et al. May 1989 A
4831546 Mitsuta et al. May 1989 A
4833418 Quintus et al. May 1989 A
4868525 Dias Sep 1989 A
4876466 Kondou et al. Oct 1989 A
4876534 Mead et al. Oct 1989 A
4878200 Asghar et al. Oct 1989 A
4879461 Philipp Nov 1989 A
4879688 Turner et al. Nov 1989 A
4885484 Gray Dec 1989 A
4907121 Hrassky Mar 1990 A
4935702 Mead et al. Jun 1990 A
4939637 Pawloski Jul 1990 A
4942540 Black et al. Jul 1990 A
4947169 Smith et al. Aug 1990 A
4953928 Anderson et al. Sep 1990 A
4962342 Mead et al. Oct 1990 A
4964074 Suzuki et al. Oct 1990 A
4969087 Tanagawa et al. Nov 1990 A
4970408 Hanke et al. Nov 1990 A
4972372 Ueno Nov 1990 A
4977381 Main Dec 1990 A
4980652 Tarusawa et al. Dec 1990 A
4999519 Kitsukawa et al. Mar 1991 A
5043674 Bonaccio et al. Aug 1991 A
5049758 Mead et al. Sep 1991 A
5050168 Paterson Sep 1991 A
5053949 Allison et al. Oct 1991 A
5055827 Philipp Oct 1991 A
5059920 Anderson et al. Oct 1991 A
5068622 Mead et al. Nov 1991 A
5073759 Mead et al. Dec 1991 A
5083044 Mead et al. Jan 1992 A
5088822 Kanda Feb 1992 A
5095284 Mead Mar 1992 A
5097305 Mead et al. Mar 1992 A
5099191 Galler et al. Mar 1992 A
5107146 El-Ayat Apr 1992 A
5107149 Platt et al. Apr 1992 A
5109261 Mead et al. Apr 1992 A
5119038 Anderson et al. Jun 1992 A
5120996 Mead et al. Jun 1992 A
5122800 Philipp Jun 1992 A
5126685 Platt et al. Jun 1992 A
5127103 Hill et al. Jun 1992 A
5128871 Schmitz Jul 1992 A
5136188 Ha et al. Aug 1992 A
5140197 Grider Aug 1992 A
5142247 Lada et al. Aug 1992 A
5144582 Steele Sep 1992 A
5146106 Anderson et al. Sep 1992 A
5150079 Williams et al. Sep 1992 A
5155836 Jordan et al. Oct 1992 A
5159292 Canfield et al. Oct 1992 A
5159335 Veneruso Oct 1992 A
5160899 Anderson et al. Nov 1992 A
5161124 Love Nov 1992 A
5165054 Platt et al. Nov 1992 A
5166562 Allen et al. Nov 1992 A
5175884 Suarez Dec 1992 A
5179531 Yamaki Jan 1993 A
5184061 Lee et al. Feb 1993 A
5198817 Walden et al. Mar 1993 A
5200751 Smith Apr 1993 A
5202687 Distinti Apr 1993 A
5204549 Platt et al. Apr 1993 A
5206582 Ekstedt et al. Apr 1993 A
5220512 Watkins et al. Jun 1993 A
5225991 Dougherty Jul 1993 A
5230000 Mozingo et al. Jul 1993 A
5235617 Mallard, Jr. Aug 1993 A
5241492 Girardeau, Jr. Aug 1993 A
5243554 Allen et al. Sep 1993 A
5245262 Moody et al. Sep 1993 A
5248843 Billings Sep 1993 A
5248873 Allen et al. Sep 1993 A
5258760 Moody et al. Nov 1993 A
5260592 Mead et al. Nov 1993 A
5260979 Parker et al. Nov 1993 A
5270963 Allen et al. Dec 1993 A
5276407 Mead et al. Jan 1994 A
5276890 Arai Jan 1994 A
5280199 Itakura Jan 1994 A
5280202 Chan et al. Jan 1994 A
5289023 Mead Feb 1994 A
5303329 Mead et al. Apr 1994 A
5304955 Atriss et al. Apr 1994 A
5305017 Gerphide Apr 1994 A
5305312 Fornek et al. Apr 1994 A
5307381 Ahuja Apr 1994 A
5313618 Pawloski May 1994 A
5317202 Waizman May 1994 A
5319370 Signore et al. Jun 1994 A
5319771 Takeda Jun 1994 A
5321828 Phillips et al. Jun 1994 A
5324958 Mead et al. Jun 1994 A
5325512 Takahashi Jun 1994 A
5329471 Swoboda et al. Jul 1994 A
5331215 Allen et al. Jul 1994 A
5331315 Crosette Jul 1994 A
5331571 Aronoff et al. Jul 1994 A
5334952 Maddy et al. Aug 1994 A
5335342 Pope et al. Aug 1994 A
5336936 Allen et al. Aug 1994 A
5339213 O'Callaghan Aug 1994 A
5339262 Rostoker et al. Aug 1994 A
5341044 Ahanin et al. Aug 1994 A
5341267 Whitten Aug 1994 A
5345195 Cordoba et al. Sep 1994 A
5349303 Gerpheide Sep 1994 A
5355097 Scott et al. Oct 1994 A
5357626 Johnson et al. Oct 1994 A
5361290 Akiyama Nov 1994 A
5371524 Herczeg et al. Dec 1994 A
5371860 Mura et al. Dec 1994 A
5371878 Coker Dec 1994 A
5371883 Gross et al. Dec 1994 A
5374787 Miller et al. Dec 1994 A
5377333 Nakagoshi et al. Dec 1994 A
5378935 Korhonen et al. Jan 1995 A
5381515 Platt et al. Jan 1995 A
5384467 Plimon et al. Jan 1995 A
5384745 Konishi et al. Jan 1995 A
5384910 Torres Jan 1995 A
5390173 Spinney et al. Feb 1995 A
5392784 Gudaitis Feb 1995 A
5394522 Sanchez-Frank et al. Feb 1995 A
5396245 Rempfer Mar 1995 A
5398261 Marbot Mar 1995 A
5399922 Kiani et al. Mar 1995 A
5408194 Steinbach et al. Apr 1995 A
5414308 Lee et al. May 1995 A
5414380 Floyd et al. May 1995 A
5416895 Anderson et al. May 1995 A
5422823 Agrawal et al. Jun 1995 A
5424689 Gillig et al. Jun 1995 A
5426378 Ong Jun 1995 A
5426384 May Jun 1995 A
5428319 Marvin et al. Jun 1995 A
5430395 Ichimaru Jul 1995 A
5430687 Hung et al. Jul 1995 A
5430734 Gilson Jul 1995 A
5432476 Tran Jul 1995 A
5438672 Dey Aug 1995 A
5440305 Signore et al. Aug 1995 A
5451887 El-Avat et al. Sep 1995 A
5453904 Higashiyama et al. Sep 1995 A
5455525 Ho et al. Oct 1995 A
5455731 Parkinson Oct 1995 A
5455927 Huang Oct 1995 A
5457410 Ting Oct 1995 A
5457479 Cheng Oct 1995 A
5463591 Aimoto et al. Oct 1995 A
5479603 Stone et al. Dec 1995 A
5479643 Bhaskar et al. Dec 1995 A
5479652 Dreyer et al. Dec 1995 A
5481471 Naglestad et al. Jan 1996 A
5488204 Mead et al. Jan 1996 A
5491458 McCune Feb 1996 A
5493246 Anderson Feb 1996 A
5493723 Beck et al. Feb 1996 A
5495077 Miller et al. Feb 1996 A
5495593 Elmer et al. Feb 1996 A
5495594 MacKenna et al. Feb 1996 A
5497119 Tedrow et al. Mar 1996 A
5499192 Knapp et al. Mar 1996 A
5500823 Martin et al. Mar 1996 A
5517198 McEwan May 1996 A
5519854 Watt May 1996 A
5521529 Agrawal et al. May 1996 A
5530444 Tice et al. Jun 1996 A
5530673 Tobita et al. Jun 1996 A
5530813 Paulsen et al. Jun 1996 A
5537057 Leong et al. Jul 1996 A
5541878 LeMoncheck et al. Jul 1996 A
5542055 Amini et al. Jul 1996 A
5543588 Bisset et al. Aug 1996 A
5543590 Gillespie et al. Aug 1996 A
5543591 Gillespie et al. Aug 1996 A
5544067 Rostoker et al. Aug 1996 A
5544311 Harenberg et al. Aug 1996 A
5546433 Tran et al. Aug 1996 A
5546562 Patel Aug 1996 A
5552725 Ray et al. Sep 1996 A
5552748 O'Shaughnessy Sep 1996 A
5554951 Gough Sep 1996 A
5555452 Callaway et al. Sep 1996 A
5555907 Philipp Sep 1996 A
5557762 Okuaki et al. Sep 1996 A
5559502 Schutte Sep 1996 A
5559996 Fujioka et al. Sep 1996 A
5563526 Hastings et al. Oct 1996 A
5563529 Seltzer et al. Oct 1996 A
5564010 Henry et al. Oct 1996 A
5564108 Hunsaker et al. Oct 1996 A
5565658 Gerpheide et al. Oct 1996 A
5566702 Philipp Oct 1996 A
5572665 Nakabayashi et al. Nov 1996 A
5572719 Biesterfeldt Nov 1996 A
5574678 Gorecki Nov 1996 A
5574852 Bakker et al. Nov 1996 A
5574892 Christensen Nov 1996 A
5579353 Parmenter et al. Nov 1996 A
5587945 Lin et al. Dec 1996 A
5587957 Kowalczyk et al. Dec 1996 A
5590354 Klapproth et al. Dec 1996 A
5594388 O'Shaughnessy et al. Jan 1997 A
5594734 Worsley et al. Jan 1997 A
5594876 Getzlaff et al. Jan 1997 A
5594890 Yamaura et al. Jan 1997 A
5600262 Kolze Feb 1997 A
5604466 Dreps et al. Feb 1997 A
5608892 Wakerly Mar 1997 A
5614861 Harada Mar 1997 A
5619430 Nolan et al. Apr 1997 A
5625316 Chambers et al. Apr 1997 A
5629857 Brennan May 1997 A
5629891 LeMoncheck et al. May 1997 A
5630052 Shah May 1997 A
5630057 Hait May 1997 A
5630102 Johnson et al. May 1997 A
5631577 Freidin et al. May 1997 A
5633766 Hase et al. May 1997 A
5642295 Smayling Jun 1997 A
5646544 Iadanza Jul 1997 A
5646901 Sharpe-Geisler et al. Jul 1997 A
5648642 Miller et al. Jul 1997 A
5651035 Tozun Jul 1997 A
5663900 Bhandari et al. Sep 1997 A
5663965 Seymour Sep 1997 A
5664199 Kuwahara Sep 1997 A
5666480 Leung et al. Sep 1997 A
5670915 Cooper et al. Sep 1997 A
5673198 Lawman et al. Sep 1997 A
5675825 Dreyer et al. Oct 1997 A
5677691 Hosticka et al. Oct 1997 A
5680070 Anderson et al. Oct 1997 A
5682032 Philipp Oct 1997 A
5684434 Mann et al. Nov 1997 A
5684952 Stein Nov 1997 A
5686844 Hull et al. Nov 1997 A
5687325 Chang Nov 1997 A
5689195 Cliff et al. Nov 1997 A
5689196 Schutte Nov 1997 A
5691664 Anderson et al. Nov 1997 A
5691898 Rosenberg et al. Nov 1997 A
5694063 Burlison et al. Dec 1997 A
5696952 Pontarelli Dec 1997 A
5699024 Manlove et al. Dec 1997 A
5703871 Pope et al. Dec 1997 A
5706453 Cheng et al. Jan 1998 A
5708589 Beauvais Jan 1998 A
5708798 Lynch et al. Jan 1998 A
5710906 Ghosh et al. Jan 1998 A
5712969 Zimmermann et al. Jan 1998 A
5721931 Gephardt et al. Feb 1998 A
5724009 Collins et al. Mar 1998 A
5727170 Mitchell et al. Mar 1998 A
5729704 Stone et al. Mar 1998 A
5730165 Philipp Mar 1998 A
5732277 Kodosky et al. Mar 1998 A
5734272 Belot et al. Mar 1998 A
5734334 Hsieh et al. Mar 1998 A
5737557 Sullivan Apr 1998 A
5737760 Grimmer et al. Apr 1998 A
5745011 Scott Apr 1998 A
5748048 Moyal May 1998 A
5748875 Tzori May 1998 A
5752013 Christensen et al. May 1998 A
5754552 Allmond et al. May 1998 A
5754826 Gamal et al. May 1998 A
5757368 Gerpheide et al. May 1998 A
5758058 Milburn May 1998 A
5761128 Watanabe Jun 1998 A
5763909 Mead et al. Jun 1998 A
5764714 Stansell et al. Jun 1998 A
5767457 Gerpheide et al. Jun 1998 A
5774704 Williams Jun 1998 A
5777399 Shibuya Jul 1998 A
5781030 Agrawal et al. Jul 1998 A
5781747 Smith et al. Jul 1998 A
5784545 Anderson et al. Jul 1998 A
5790957 Heidari Aug 1998 A
5796183 Hourmand Aug 1998 A
5799176 Kapusta et al. Aug 1998 A
5802073 Platt Sep 1998 A
5802290 Casselman Sep 1998 A
5805792 Swoboda et al. Sep 1998 A
5805897 Glowny Sep 1998 A
5808883 Hawkes Sep 1998 A
5811987 Ashmore, Jr. et al. Sep 1998 A
5812698 Platt et al. Sep 1998 A
5818254 Agrawal et al. Oct 1998 A
5818444 Alimpich et al. Oct 1998 A
5819028 Manghirmalani et al. Oct 1998 A
5822387 Mar Oct 1998 A
5822531 Gorczyca et al. Oct 1998 A
5828693 Mays et al. Oct 1998 A
5838583 Varadarajan et al. Nov 1998 A
5841078 Miller et al. Nov 1998 A
5841996 Nolan et al. Nov 1998 A
5844256 Higashino Dec 1998 A
5844404 Caser et al. Dec 1998 A
5848285 Kapusta et al. Dec 1998 A
5850156 Wittman Dec 1998 A
5852733 Chien et al. Dec 1998 A
5854625 Frisch et al. Dec 1998 A
5857109 Taylor Jan 1999 A
5861583 Schediwy et al. Jan 1999 A
5861875 Gerpheide Jan 1999 A
5864242 Allen et al. Jan 1999 A
5864392 Winklhofer et al. Jan 1999 A
5867015 Corsi et al. Feb 1999 A
5867046 Sugasawa Feb 1999 A
5867399 Rostoker et al. Feb 1999 A
5869979 Bocchino Feb 1999 A
5870004 Lu Feb 1999 A
5870309 Lawman Feb 1999 A
5870345 Stecker Feb 1999 A
5872464 Gradinariu Feb 1999 A
5874958 Ludolph Feb 1999 A
5875293 Bell et al. Feb 1999 A
5877656 Mann et al. Mar 1999 A
5878425 Redpath Mar 1999 A
5880411 Gillespie et al. Mar 1999 A
5880598 Duong Mar 1999 A
5883623 Cseri Mar 1999 A
5886582 Stansell Mar 1999 A
5887189 Birns et al. Mar 1999 A
5889236 Gillespie et al. Mar 1999 A
5889723 Pascucci Mar 1999 A
5889936 Chan Mar 1999 A
5889988 Held Mar 1999 A
5894226 Koyama Apr 1999 A
5894243 Hwang Apr 1999 A
5894565 Furtek et al. Apr 1999 A
5895494 Scalzi et al. Apr 1999 A
5896068 Moyal Apr 1999 A
5896330 Gibson Apr 1999 A
5898345 Namura et al. Apr 1999 A
5900780 Hirose et al. May 1999 A
5901062 Burch et al. May 1999 A
5903718 Marik May 1999 A
5905398 Todsen et al. May 1999 A
5909544 Anderson, II et al. Jun 1999 A
5911059 Profit, Jr. Jun 1999 A
5914465 Allen et al. Jun 1999 A
5914633 Comino et al. Jun 1999 A
5914708 LaGrange et al. Jun 1999 A
5917356 Casal et al. Jun 1999 A
5920310 Faggin et al. Jul 1999 A
5923264 Lavelle et al. Jul 1999 A
5926566 Wang et al. Jul 1999 A
5929710 Bien Jul 1999 A
5930148 Bjorksten et al. Jul 1999 A
5930150 Cohen et al. Jul 1999 A
5931959 Kwiat Aug 1999 A
5933023 Young Aug 1999 A
5933356 Rostoker et al. Aug 1999 A
5933816 Zeanah et al. Aug 1999 A
5935233 Jeddeloh Aug 1999 A
5935266 Thurnhofer et al. Aug 1999 A
5939904 Fetterman et al. Aug 1999 A
5939949 Olgaard et al. Aug 1999 A
5941991 Kageshima Aug 1999 A
5942733 Allen et al. Aug 1999 A
5943052 Allen et al. Aug 1999 A
5945878 Westwick et al. Aug 1999 A
5949632 Barreras, Sr. et al. Sep 1999 A
5952888 Scott Sep 1999 A
5956279 Mo et al. Sep 1999 A
5959871 Pierzchala et al. Sep 1999 A
5963075 Hiiragizawa Oct 1999 A
5963105 Nguyen Oct 1999 A
5963503 Lee Oct 1999 A
5964893 Circello et al. Oct 1999 A
5966027 Kapusta et al. Oct 1999 A
5966532 McDonald et al. Oct 1999 A
5968135 Teramoto et al. Oct 1999 A
5969513 Clark Oct 1999 A
5969632 Diamant et al. Oct 1999 A
5973368 Pearce et al. Oct 1999 A
5974235 Nunally et al. Oct 1999 A
5977791 Veenstra Nov 1999 A
5978584 Nishibata et al. Nov 1999 A
5978937 Miyamori et al. Nov 1999 A
5982105 Masters Nov 1999 A
5982229 Wong et al. Nov 1999 A
5982241 Nguyen et al. Nov 1999 A
5983277 Heile et al. Nov 1999 A
5986479 Mohan Nov 1999 A
5987246 Thomsen et al. Nov 1999 A
5988902 Holehan Nov 1999 A
5994939 Johnson et al. Nov 1999 A
5996032 Baker Nov 1999 A
5999725 Barbier et al. Dec 1999 A
6002268 Sasaki et al. Dec 1999 A
6002398 Wilson Dec 1999 A
6003054 Oshima et al. Dec 1999 A
6003107 Ranson et al. Dec 1999 A
6003133 Moughanni et al. Dec 1999 A
6005814 Mulholland et al. Dec 1999 A
6005904 Knapp et al. Dec 1999 A
6008685 Kunst Dec 1999 A
6008703 Perrott et al. Dec 1999 A
6009270 Mann Dec 1999 A
6009496 Tsai Dec 1999 A
6011407 New Jan 2000 A
6012835 Thompson et al. Jan 2000 A
6014135 Fernandes Jan 2000 A
6014509 Furtek et al. Jan 2000 A
6014723 Tremblay et al. Jan 2000 A
6016554 Skrovan et al. Jan 2000 A
6016563 Fleisher Jan 2000 A
6018559 Azegami et al. Jan 2000 A
6023422 Allen et al. Feb 2000 A
6023565 Lawman et al. Feb 2000 A
6026134 Duffy et al. Feb 2000 A
6026501 Hohl et al. Feb 2000 A
6028271 Gillespie et al. Feb 2000 A
6028959 Wang et al. Feb 2000 A
6031365 Sharpe-Geisler Feb 2000 A
6032268 Swoboda et al. Feb 2000 A
6034538 Abramovici Mar 2000 A
6037807 Wu et al. Mar 2000 A
6038551 Barlow et al. Mar 2000 A
6040707 Young et al. Mar 2000 A
6041406 Mann Mar 2000 A
6043695 O'Sullivan Mar 2000 A
6043719 Lin et al. Mar 2000 A
6049223 Lytle et al. Apr 2000 A
6049225 Huang et al. Apr 2000 A
6051772 Cameron et al. Apr 2000 A
6052035 Nolan et al. Apr 2000 A
6052524 Pauna Apr 2000 A
6055584 Bridges et al. Apr 2000 A
6057705 Wojewoda et al. May 2000 A
6058263 Voth May 2000 A
6058452 Rangasayee et al. May 2000 A
6061511 Marantz et al. May 2000 A
6066961 Lee et al. May 2000 A
6070003 Gove et al. May 2000 A
6072803 Allmond et al. Jun 2000 A
6075941 Itoh et al. Jun 2000 A
6079985 Wohl et al. Jun 2000 A
6081140 King Jun 2000 A
6094730 Lopez et al. Jul 2000 A
6097211 Couts-Martin et al. Aug 2000 A
6097432 Mead et al. Aug 2000 A
6101457 Barch et al. Aug 2000 A
6101617 Burckhartt et al. Aug 2000 A
6104217 Magana Aug 2000 A
6104325 Liaw et al. Aug 2000 A
6107769 Saylor et al. Aug 2000 A
6107826 Young et al. Aug 2000 A
6107882 Gabara et al. Aug 2000 A
6110223 Southgate et al. Aug 2000 A
6111431 Estrada Aug 2000 A
6112264 Beasley et al. Aug 2000 A
6121791 Abbott Sep 2000 A
6121805 Thamsirianunt et al. Sep 2000 A
6121965 Kenney et al. Sep 2000 A
6125416 Warren Sep 2000 A
6130548 Koifman Oct 2000 A
6130551 Agrawal et al. Oct 2000 A
6130552 Jefferson et al. Oct 2000 A
6133773 Garlepp et al. Oct 2000 A
6134181 Landry Oct 2000 A
6134516 Wang et al. Oct 2000 A
6137308 Nayak Oct 2000 A
6140853 Lo Oct 2000 A
6141007 Lebling et al. Oct 2000 A
6141376 Shaw Oct 2000 A
6141764 Ezell Oct 2000 A
6144327 Distinti et al. Nov 2000 A
6148104 Wang et al. Nov 2000 A
6148441 Woodward Nov 2000 A
6149299 Aslan et al. Nov 2000 A
6150866 Eto et al. Nov 2000 A
6154064 Proebsting Nov 2000 A
6157024 Chapdelaine et al. Dec 2000 A
6157270 Tso Dec 2000 A
6161199 Szeto et al. Dec 2000 A
6166367 Cho Dec 2000 A
6166960 Marneweck et al. Dec 2000 A
6167077 Ducaroir Dec 2000 A
6167559 Furtek et al. Dec 2000 A
6169383 Johnson Jan 2001 B1
6172571 Moyal et al. Jan 2001 B1
6173419 Barnett Jan 2001 B1
6175914 Mann Jan 2001 B1
6175949 Gristede et al. Jan 2001 B1
6181163 Agrawal et al. Jan 2001 B1
6183131 Holloway et al. Feb 2001 B1
6185127 Myers et al. Feb 2001 B1
6185450 Seguine et al. Feb 2001 B1
6185522 Bakker Feb 2001 B1
6185703 Guddat et al. Feb 2001 B1
6185732 Mann et al. Feb 2001 B1
6188228 Philipp Feb 2001 B1
6188241 Gauthier et al. Feb 2001 B1
6188381 van der Wal et al. Feb 2001 B1
6188391 Seely et al. Feb 2001 B1
6188975 Gay Feb 2001 B1
6191603 Muradali et al. Feb 2001 B1
6191660 Mar et al. Feb 2001 B1
6191998 Reddy et al. Feb 2001 B1
6192431 Dabral et al. Feb 2001 B1
6198303 Rangasayee Mar 2001 B1
6201407 Kapusta et al. Mar 2001 B1
6201829 Schneider Mar 2001 B1
6202044 Tzori Mar 2001 B1
6204687 Schultz et al. Mar 2001 B1
6205574 Dellinger et al. Mar 2001 B1
6208572 Adams et al. Mar 2001 B1
6211708 Klemmer Apr 2001 B1
6211715 Terauchi Apr 2001 B1
6211741 Dalmia Apr 2001 B1
6215352 Sudo Apr 2001 B1
6219729 Keats et al. Apr 2001 B1
6222528 Gerpheide et al. Apr 2001 B1
6223144 Barnett et al. Apr 2001 B1
6223147 Bowers Apr 2001 B1
6223272 Coehlo et al. Apr 2001 B1
RE37195 Kean May 2001 E
6225866 Kubota et al. May 2001 B1
6225992 Hsu et al. May 2001 B1
6236242 Hedberg May 2001 B1
6236275 Dent May 2001 B1
6236278 Olgaard May 2001 B1
6236593 Hong et al. May 2001 B1
6239389 Allen et al. May 2001 B1
6239798 Ludolph et al. May 2001 B1
6240375 Sonoda May 2001 B1
6246258 Lesea Jun 2001 B1
6246410 Bergeron et al. Jun 2001 B1
6249167 Oguchi et al. Jun 2001 B1
6249447 Boylan et al. Jun 2001 B1
6253250 Evans et al. Jun 2001 B1
6253754 Ward Jul 2001 B1
6262717 Donohue et al. Jul 2001 B1
6263302 Hellestrand et al. Jul 2001 B1
6263339 Hirsch Jul 2001 B1
6263484 Yang Jul 2001 B1
6271679 McClintock et al. Aug 2001 B1
6272646 Rangasayee Aug 2001 B1
6275117 Abugharbieh et al. Aug 2001 B1
6278568 Cloke et al. Aug 2001 B1
6280391 Olson et al. Aug 2001 B1
6281753 Corsi et al. Aug 2001 B1
6282547 Hirsch Aug 2001 B1
6282551 Anderson et al. Aug 2001 B1
6286127 King et al. Sep 2001 B1
6288707 Philipp Sep 2001 B1
6289300 Brannick et al. Sep 2001 B1
6289478 Kitagaki Sep 2001 B1
6289489 Bold et al. Sep 2001 B1
6292028 Tomita Sep 2001 B1
6294932 Watarai Sep 2001 B1
6294962 Mar Sep 2001 B1
6298320 Buckmaster et al. Oct 2001 B1
6304014 England et al. Oct 2001 B1
6304101 Nishihara Oct 2001 B1
6304790 Nakamura et al. Oct 2001 B1
6307413 Dalmia et al. Oct 2001 B1
6310521 Dalmia Oct 2001 B1
6310611 Caldwell Oct 2001 B1
6311149 Ryan et al. Oct 2001 B1
6314530 Mann Nov 2001 B1
6320184 Winklhofer et al. Nov 2001 B1
6320282 Caldwell Nov 2001 B1
6321369 Heile et al. Nov 2001 B1
6323846 Westerman et al. Nov 2001 B1
6324628 Chan Nov 2001 B1
6326859 Goldman et al. Dec 2001 B1
6332137 Hori et al. Dec 2001 B1
6332201 Chin et al. Dec 2001 B1
6337579 Mochida Jan 2002 B1
6338109 Snyder et al. Jan 2002 B1
6339815 Feng et al. Jan 2002 B1
6342907 Petty et al. Jan 2002 B1
6345383 Ueki Feb 2002 B1
6347395 Payne et al. Feb 2002 B1
6351789 Green Feb 2002 B1
6353452 Hamada et al. Mar 2002 B1
6355980 Callahan Mar 2002 B1
6356862 Bailey Mar 2002 B2
6356958 Lin Mar 2002 B1
6356960 Jones et al. Mar 2002 B1
6359950 Gossmann et al. Mar 2002 B2
6362697 Pulvirenti Mar 2002 B1
6366174 Berry et al. Apr 2002 B1
6366300 Ohara et al. Apr 2002 B1
6366874 Lee et al. Apr 2002 B1
6366878 Grunert Apr 2002 B1
6369660 Wei Apr 2002 B1
6371878 Bowen Apr 2002 B1
6373954 Malcolm et al. Apr 2002 B1
6374370 Bockhaus et al. Apr 2002 B1
6377009 Philipp Apr 2002 B1
6377575 Mullaney et al. Apr 2002 B1
6377646 Sha Apr 2002 B1
6380811 Zarubinsky et al. Apr 2002 B1
6380929 Platt Apr 2002 B1
6380931 Gillespie et al. Apr 2002 B1
6384947 Ackerman et al. May 2002 B1
6385742 Kirsch et al. May 2002 B1
6388109 Schwarz et al. May 2002 B1
6388464 Lacey et al. May 2002 B1
6396302 New et al. May 2002 B2
6396657 Suzuki May 2002 B1
6397232 Cheng-Hung et al. May 2002 B1
6404204 Farruggia et al. Jun 2002 B1
6404445 Galea et al. Jun 2002 B1
6407953 Cleeves Jun 2002 B1
6408432 Herrmann et al. Jun 2002 B1
6411665 Chan et al. Jun 2002 B1
6411974 Graham et al. Jun 2002 B1
6414671 Gillespie et al. Jul 2002 B1
6421698 Hong Jul 2002 B1
6425109 Choukalos et al. Jul 2002 B1
6429882 Abdelnur et al. Aug 2002 B1
6430305 Decker Aug 2002 B1
6433645 Mann et al. Aug 2002 B1
6434187 Beard Aug 2002 B1
6437805 Sojoodi et al. Aug 2002 B1
6438565 Ammirato et al. Aug 2002 B1
6438735 McElvain et al. Aug 2002 B1
6438738 Elayda Aug 2002 B1
6441073 Tanaka et al. Aug 2002 B1
6445211 Saripella Sep 2002 B1
6449628 Wasson Sep 2002 B1
6449755 Beausang et al. Sep 2002 B1
6449761 Greidinger et al. Sep 2002 B1
6452437 Takeuchi et al. Sep 2002 B1
6452514 Philipp Sep 2002 B1
6453175 Mizell et al. Sep 2002 B2
6453461 Chaiken Sep 2002 B1
6456304 Angiulo et al. Sep 2002 B1
6457355 Philipp Oct 2002 B1
6457479 Zhuang et al. Oct 2002 B1
6460172 Insenser Farre et al. Oct 2002 B1
6463488 San Juan Oct 2002 B1
6466036 Philipp Oct 2002 B1
6466078 Stiff Oct 2002 B1
6466898 Chan Oct 2002 B1
6473069 Gerpheide Oct 2002 B1
6473825 Worley et al. Oct 2002 B1
6477691 Bergamashi/Rab et al. Nov 2002 B1
6480921 Mansoorian et al. Nov 2002 B1
6483343 Faith et al. Nov 2002 B1
6487700 Fukushima Nov 2002 B1
6489899 Ely et al. Dec 2002 B1
6490213 Mu et al. Dec 2002 B1
6492834 Lytle et al. Dec 2002 B1
6496971 Lesea et al. Dec 2002 B1
6498720 Glad Dec 2002 B2
6499134 Buffet et al. Dec 2002 B1
6499359 Washeleski et al. Dec 2002 B1
6504403 Bangs et al. Jan 2003 B2
6507214 Snyder Jan 2003 B1
6507215 Piasecki et al. Jan 2003 B1
6507857 Yalcinalp Jan 2003 B1
6509758 Piasecki et al. Jan 2003 B2
6512395 Lacey et al. Jan 2003 B1
6516428 Wenzel et al. Feb 2003 B2
6522128 Ely et al. Feb 2003 B1
6523416 Takagi et al. Feb 2003 B2
6525593 Mar Feb 2003 B1
6526556 Stoica et al. Feb 2003 B1
6529791 Takagi Mar 2003 B1
6530065 McDonald et al. Mar 2003 B1
6534970 Ely et al. Mar 2003 B1
6535061 Darmawaskita et al. Mar 2003 B2
6535200 Philipp Mar 2003 B2
6535946 Bryant et al. Mar 2003 B1
6536028 Katsioulas et al. Mar 2003 B1
6539534 Bennett Mar 2003 B1
6542025 Kutz et al. Apr 2003 B1
6542844 Hanna Apr 2003 B1
6542845 Grucci et al. Apr 2003 B1
6552933 Roohparvar Apr 2003 B2
6553057 Sha Apr 2003 B1
6554469 Thomson et al. Apr 2003 B1
6557164 Faustini Apr 2003 B1
6559685 Green May 2003 B2
6560306 Duffy et al. May 2003 B1
6560699 Konkle May 2003 B1
6563391 Mar May 2003 B1
6564179 Belhaj May 2003 B1
6566961 Dasgupta et al. May 2003 B2
6567426 van Hook et al. May 2003 B1
6567932 Edwards et al. May 2003 B2
6570557 Westerman et al. May 2003 B1
6571331 Henry et al. May 2003 B2
6571373 Devins et al. May 2003 B1
6574590 Kershaw et al. Jun 2003 B1
6574739 Kung et al. Jun 2003 B1
6575373 Nakano Jun 2003 B1
6577258 Ruha et al. Jun 2003 B2
6578174 Zizzo Jun 2003 B2
6580329 Sander Jun 2003 B2
6581191 Schubert et al. Jun 2003 B1
6587093 Shaw et al. Jul 2003 B1
6587995 Duboc et al. Jul 2003 B1
6588004 Southgate et al. Jul 2003 B1
6590422 Dillon Jul 2003 B1
6590517 Swanson Jul 2003 B1
6591369 Edwards et al. Jul 2003 B1
6592626 Bauchot et al. Jul 2003 B1
6594796 Chiang Jul 2003 B1
6594799 Robertson et al. Jul 2003 B1
6597212 Wang et al. Jul 2003 B1
6597824 Newberg et al. Jul 2003 B2
6598178 Yee et al. Jul 2003 B1
6600346 Macaluso Jul 2003 B1
6600351 Bisanti et al. Jul 2003 B2
6600575 Kohara Jul 2003 B1
6601189 Edwards et al. Jul 2003 B1
6601236 Curtis Jul 2003 B1
6603330 Snyder Aug 2003 B1
6603348 Preuss et al. Aug 2003 B1
6604179 Volk et al. Aug 2003 B2
6606731 Baum et al. Aug 2003 B1
6608472 Kutz et al. Aug 2003 B1
6610936 Gillespie et al. Aug 2003 B2
6611220 Snyder Aug 2003 B1
6611276 Muratori et al. Aug 2003 B1
6611856 Liao et al. Aug 2003 B1
6611952 Prakash et al. Aug 2003 B1
6613098 Sorge et al. Sep 2003 B1
6614260 Welch et al. Sep 2003 B1
6614320 Sullam et al. Sep 2003 B1
6614374 Gustavsson et al. Sep 2003 B1
6614458 Lambert et al. Sep 2003 B1
6615167 Devins et al. Sep 2003 B1
6617888 Volk Sep 2003 B2
6618854 Mann Sep 2003 B1
6621356 Gotz et al. Sep 2003 B2
6624640 Lund et al. Sep 2003 B2
6625765 Krishnan Sep 2003 B1
6628163 Dathe et al. Sep 2003 B2
6628311 Fang Sep 2003 B1
6631508 Williams Oct 2003 B1
6634008 Dole Oct 2003 B1
6636096 Schaffer et al. Oct 2003 B2
6637015 Ogami et al. Oct 2003 B1
6639586 Gerpheide Oct 2003 B2
6642857 Schediwy et al. Nov 2003 B1
6643151 Nebrigic et al. Nov 2003 B1
6643810 Whetsel Nov 2003 B2
6649924 Philipp et al. Nov 2003 B1
6650581 Hong et al. Nov 2003 B2
6658498 Carney et al. Dec 2003 B1
6658633 Devins et al. Dec 2003 B2
6661288 Morgan et al. Dec 2003 B2
6661410 Casebolt et al. Dec 2003 B2
6661724 Snyder et al. Dec 2003 B1
6664978 Kekic et al. Dec 2003 B1
6664991 Chew et al. Dec 2003 B1
6667642 Moyal Dec 2003 B1
6667740 Ely et al. Dec 2003 B2
6670852 Hauck Dec 2003 B1
6673308 Hino et al. Jan 2004 B2
6677814 Low et al. Jan 2004 B2
6677932 Westerman Jan 2004 B1
6678645 Rajsuman et al. Jan 2004 B1
6678877 Perry et al. Jan 2004 B1
6680632 Meyers et al. Jan 2004 B1
6680731 Gerpheide et al. Jan 2004 B2
6681280 Miyake et al. Jan 2004 B1
6681359 Au et al. Jan 2004 B1
6683462 Shimizu Jan 2004 B2
6683930 Dalmia Jan 2004 B1
6686787 Ling Feb 2004 B2
6686860 Gulati et al. Feb 2004 B2
6690224 Moore Feb 2004 B1
6691193 Wang et al. Feb 2004 B1
6691301 Bowen Feb 2004 B2
6697754 Alexander Feb 2004 B1
6701340 Gorecki Mar 2004 B1
6701487 Ogami et al. Mar 2004 B1
6701508 Bartz et al. Mar 2004 B1
6704381 Moyal et al. Mar 2004 B1
6704879 Parrish Mar 2004 B1
6704889 Veenstra et al. Mar 2004 B2
6704893 Bauwens et al. Mar 2004 B1
6705511 Dames et al. Mar 2004 B1
6710788 Freach et al. Mar 2004 B1
6711226 Williams et al. Mar 2004 B1
6711731 Weiss Mar 2004 B2
6713897 Caldwell Mar 2004 B2
6714066 Gorecki et al. Mar 2004 B2
6714817 Daynes et al. Mar 2004 B2
6715132 Bartz et al. Mar 2004 B1
6717474 Chen et al. Apr 2004 B2
6718294 Bortfeld Apr 2004 B1
6718520 Merryman et al. Apr 2004 B1
6718533 Schneider et al. Apr 2004 B1
6724220 Snyder et al. Apr 2004 B1
6728900 Meli Apr 2004 B1
6728902 Kaiser et al. Apr 2004 B2
6730863 Gerpheide May 2004 B1
6731552 Perner May 2004 B2
6732068 Sample et al. May 2004 B2
6732347 Camilleri et al. May 2004 B1
6738858 Fernald et al. May 2004 B1
6744323 Moyal et al. Jun 2004 B1
6748569 Brooke et al. Jun 2004 B1
6750852 Gillespie Jun 2004 B2
6750889 Livingston et al. Jun 2004 B1
6754101 Terzioglu et al. Jun 2004 B2
6754723 Kato Jun 2004 B2
6754765 Chang et al. Jun 2004 B1
6754849 Tamura Jun 2004 B2
6757882 Chen et al. Jun 2004 B2
6765407 Snyder Jul 2004 B1
6768337 Kohno et al. Jul 2004 B2
6768352 Maher et al. Jul 2004 B1
6769622 Tournemille et al. Aug 2004 B1
6771552 Fujisawa Aug 2004 B2
6774644 Eberlein Aug 2004 B2
6781456 Pradhan Aug 2004 B2
6782068 Wilson et al. Aug 2004 B1
6784821 Lee Aug 2004 B1
6785881 Bartz et al. Aug 2004 B1
6788116 Cook et al. Sep 2004 B1
6788221 Ely et al. Sep 2004 B1
6788521 Nishi Sep 2004 B2
6791377 Ilchmann et al. Sep 2004 B2
6792584 Eneboe et al. Sep 2004 B1
6798218 Kasperkovitz Sep 2004 B2
6798299 Mar et al. Sep 2004 B1
6799198 Huboi et al. Sep 2004 B1
6806771 Hildebrant et al. Oct 2004 B1
6806782 Motoyoshi et al. Oct 2004 B2
6807109 Tomishima Oct 2004 B2
6809275 Cheng et al. Oct 2004 B1
6809566 Xin-LeBlanc Oct 2004 B1
6810442 Lin et al. Oct 2004 B1
6812678 Brohlin Nov 2004 B1
6815979 Ooshita Nov 2004 B2
6816544 Bailey et al. Nov 2004 B1
6817005 Mason et al. Nov 2004 B2
6819142 Viehmann et al. Nov 2004 B2
6823282 Snyder Nov 2004 B1
6823497 Schubert et al. Nov 2004 B2
6825689 Snyder Nov 2004 B1
6825869 Bang Nov 2004 B2
6828824 Betz et al. Dec 2004 B2
6829727 Pawloski Dec 2004 B1
6834384 Fiorella, II et al. Dec 2004 B2
6836169 Richmond et al. Dec 2004 B2
6839774 Ahn et al. Jan 2005 B1
6842710 Gehring et al. Jan 2005 B1
6847203 Conti et al. Jan 2005 B1
6850117 Weber et al. Feb 2005 B2
6850554 Sha Feb 2005 B1
6853598 Chevallier Feb 2005 B2
6854067 Kutz et al. Feb 2005 B1
6856433 Hatano et al. Feb 2005 B2
6859884 Sullam Feb 2005 B1
6862240 Burgan Mar 2005 B2
6864710 Lacey et al. Mar 2005 B1
6865429 Schneider et al. Mar 2005 B1
6865504 Larson et al. Mar 2005 B2
6868500 Kutz et al. Mar 2005 B1
6871253 Greeff et al. Mar 2005 B2
6871331 Bloom et al. Mar 2005 B1
6873203 Latham, II et al. Mar 2005 B1
6873210 Mulder et al. Mar 2005 B2
6876941 Nightingale Apr 2005 B2
6880086 Kidder et al. Apr 2005 B2
6888453 Lutz et al. May 2005 B2
6888538 Ely et al. May 2005 B2
6892310 Kutz et al. May 2005 B1
6892322 Snyder May 2005 B1
6893724 Lin et al. May 2005 B2
6894928 Owen May 2005 B2
6897390 Caldwell et al. May 2005 B2
6898703 Ogami et al. May 2005 B1
6900663 Roper et al. May 2005 B1
6901563 Ogami et al. May 2005 B1
6903402 Miyazawa Jun 2005 B2
6903613 Mitchell et al. Jun 2005 B1
6904570 Foote et al. Jun 2005 B2
6910126 Mar et al. Jun 2005 B1
6911857 Stiff Jun 2005 B1
6917661 Scott et al. Jul 2005 B1
6922821 Nemecek Jul 2005 B1
6924668 Muller et al. Aug 2005 B2
6934674 Douezy et al. Aug 2005 B1
6937075 Lim et al. Aug 2005 B2
6940356 McDonald et al. Sep 2005 B2
6941336 Mar Sep 2005 B1
6941538 Hwang et al. Sep 2005 B2
6944018 Caldwell Sep 2005 B2
6949811 Miyazawa Sep 2005 B2
6949984 Siniscalchi Sep 2005 B2
6950954 Sullam et al. Sep 2005 B1
6950990 Rajarajan et al. Sep 2005 B2
6952778 Snyder Oct 2005 B1
6954511 Tachimori Oct 2005 B2
6956419 Mann et al. Oct 2005 B1
6957180 Nemecek Oct 2005 B1
6957242 Snyder Oct 2005 B1
6963233 Puccio et al. Nov 2005 B2
6963908 Lynch et al. Nov 2005 B1
6966039 Bartz et al. Nov 2005 B1
6967511 Sullam Nov 2005 B1
6967960 Bross et al. Nov 2005 B1
6969978 Dening Nov 2005 B2
6970844 Bierenbaum Nov 2005 B1
6971004 Pleis et al. Nov 2005 B1
6973400 Cahill-O'Brien et al. Dec 2005 B2
6975123 Malang et al. Dec 2005 B1
6980060 Boerstler et al. Dec 2005 B2
6981090 Kutz et al. Dec 2005 B1
6988192 Snider Jan 2006 B2
6989659 Menegoli et al. Jan 2006 B2
6996799 Cismas et al. Feb 2006 B1
7005933 Shutt Feb 2006 B1
7009444 Scott Mar 2006 B1
7010773 Bartz et al. Mar 2006 B1
7015735 Kimura et al. Mar 2006 B2
7017145 Taylor Mar 2006 B2
7017409 Zielinski et al. Mar 2006 B2
7020854 Killian et al. Mar 2006 B2
7023215 Steenwyk Apr 2006 B2
7023257 Sullam Apr 2006 B1
7024636 Weed Apr 2006 B2
7024654 Bersch et al. Apr 2006 B2
7026861 Steenwyk Apr 2006 B2
7030513 Caldwell Apr 2006 B2
7030656 Lo et al. Apr 2006 B2
7030688 Dosho et al. Apr 2006 B2
7030782 Ely et al. Apr 2006 B2
7034603 Brady et al. Apr 2006 B2
7042301 Sutardja May 2006 B2
7047166 Dancea May 2006 B2
7055035 Allison et al. May 2006 B2
7058921 Hwang et al. Jun 2006 B1
7073158 McCubbrey Jul 2006 B2
7076420 Snyder et al. Jul 2006 B1
7079166 Hong Jul 2006 B1
7086014 Bartz et al. Aug 2006 B1
7088166 Reinschmidt et al. Aug 2006 B1
7089175 Nemecek et al. Aug 2006 B1
7091713 Erdelyi et al. Aug 2006 B2
7092980 Mar et al. Aug 2006 B1
7098414 Caldwell Aug 2006 B2
7099818 Nemecek Aug 2006 B1
7103108 Beard Sep 2006 B1
7109978 Gillespie et al. Sep 2006 B2
7117485 Wilkinson et al. Oct 2006 B2
7119550 Kitano et al. Oct 2006 B2
7119602 Davis Oct 2006 B2
7124376 Zaidi et al. Oct 2006 B2
7127630 Snyder Oct 2006 B1
7129793 Gramegna Oct 2006 B2
7129873 Kawamura Oct 2006 B2
7132835 Arcus Nov 2006 B1
7133140 Lukacs et al. Nov 2006 B2
7133793 Ely et al. Nov 2006 B2
7138841 Li Nov 2006 B1
7138868 Sanchez et al. Nov 2006 B2
7139530 Kusbel Nov 2006 B2
7139999 Bowman-Amuah Nov 2006 B2
7141968 Hibbs et al. Nov 2006 B2
7141987 Hibbs et al. Nov 2006 B2
7149316 Kutz et al. Dec 2006 B1
7150002 Anderson et al. Dec 2006 B1
7151528 Taylor et al. Dec 2006 B2
7152027 Andrade et al. Dec 2006 B2
7154294 Liu et al. Dec 2006 B2
7161936 Barrass et al. Jan 2007 B1
7162410 Nemecek et al. Jan 2007 B1
7171455 Gupta et al. Jan 2007 B1
7176701 Wachi et al. Feb 2007 B2
7178096 Rangan et al. Feb 2007 B2
7180342 Shutt et al. Feb 2007 B1
7185162 Snyder Feb 2007 B1
7185321 Roe et al. Feb 2007 B1
7188063 Snyder Mar 2007 B1
7193901 Ruby et al. Mar 2007 B2
7200507 Chen et al. Apr 2007 B2
7206733 Nemecek Apr 2007 B1
7212189 Shaw et al. May 2007 B2
7221187 Snyder et al. May 2007 B1
7227389 Gong et al. Jun 2007 B2
7236921 Nemecek et al. Jun 2007 B1
7250825 Wilson et al. Jul 2007 B2
7256588 Howard et al. Aug 2007 B2
7265633 Stiff Sep 2007 B1
7266768 Ferlitsch et al. Sep 2007 B2
7281846 McLeod Oct 2007 B2
7282905 Chen et al. Oct 2007 B2
7283151 Nihei et al. Oct 2007 B2
7287112 Pleis et al. Oct 2007 B1
7288977 Stanley Oct 2007 B2
7290244 Peck et al. Oct 2007 B2
7295049 Moyal et al. Nov 2007 B1
7298124 Kan et al. Nov 2007 B2
7301835 Joshi et al. Nov 2007 B2
7305510 Miller Dec 2007 B2
7307485 Snyder et al. Dec 2007 B1
7308608 Pleis et al. Dec 2007 B1
7312616 Snyder Dec 2007 B2
7323879 Kuo et al. Jan 2008 B2
7332976 Brennan Feb 2008 B1
7342405 Eldridge et al. Mar 2008 B2
7348861 Wu et al. Mar 2008 B1
7358714 Watanabe et al. Apr 2008 B2
7367017 Maddocks et al. Apr 2008 B2
7373437 Seigneret et al. May 2008 B2
7376001 Joshi et al. May 2008 B2
7376904 Cifra et al. May 2008 B2
7386740 Kutz et al. Jun 2008 B2
7391204 Bicking Jun 2008 B2
7397226 Mannama et al. Jul 2008 B1
7400183 Sivadasan et al. Jul 2008 B1
7406674 Ogami et al. Jul 2008 B1
7421251 Westwick et al. Sep 2008 B2
7466307 Trent, Jr. et al. Dec 2008 B2
7542533 Jasa et al. Jun 2009 B2
7554847 Lee Jun 2009 B2
7612527 Hoffman et al. Nov 2009 B2
7616509 Qureshi et al. Nov 2009 B2
8085020 Bennett Dec 2011 B1
8164365 Wright et al. Apr 2012 B2
20010002129 Zimmerman et al. May 2001 A1
20010010083 Satoh Jul 2001 A1
20010021985 Aldridge et al. Sep 2001 A1
20010038392 Humpleman et al. Nov 2001 A1
20010043081 Rees Nov 2001 A1
20010044927 Karniewicz Nov 2001 A1
20010045861 Bloodworth et al. Nov 2001 A1
20010047509 Mason et al. Nov 2001 A1
20020010716 McCartney et al. Jan 2002 A1
20020016706 Cooke et al. Feb 2002 A1
20020023110 Fortin et al. Feb 2002 A1
20020042696 Garcia et al. Apr 2002 A1
20020052729 Kyung et al. May 2002 A1
20020052941 Patterson May 2002 A1
20020055834 Andrade et al. May 2002 A1
20020059543 Cheng et al. May 2002 A1
20020063688 Shaw et al. May 2002 A1
20020065646 Waldie et al. May 2002 A1
20020068989 Ebisawa et al. Jun 2002 A1
20020073119 Richard Jun 2002 A1
20020073380 Cooke Jun 2002 A1
20020080186 Frederiksen Jun 2002 A1
20020085020 Carroll, Jr. Jul 2002 A1
20020099863 Comeau et al. Jul 2002 A1
20020109722 Rogers et al. Aug 2002 A1
20020116168 Kim Aug 2002 A1
20020121679 Bazarjani et al. Sep 2002 A1
20020122060 Markel Sep 2002 A1
20020129334 Dane et al. Sep 2002 A1
20020133771 Barnett Sep 2002 A1
20020133794 Kanapathippillai et al. Sep 2002 A1
20020138516 Igra Sep 2002 A1
20020144099 Muro et al. Oct 2002 A1
20020145433 Morrise et al. Oct 2002 A1
20020152234 Estrada et al. Oct 2002 A1
20020152449 Lin Oct 2002 A1
20020156885 Thakkar Oct 2002 A1
20020156929 Hekmatpour Oct 2002 A1
20020156998 Casselman Oct 2002 A1
20020161802 Gabrick et al. Oct 2002 A1
20020166100 Meding Nov 2002 A1
20020170050 Fiorella, III et al. Nov 2002 A1
20020174134 Goykhman Nov 2002 A1
20020174411 Feng et al. Nov 2002 A1
20020183956 Nightingale Dec 2002 A1
20020188910 Zizzo Dec 2002 A1
20020191029 Gillespie et al. Dec 2002 A1
20030011639 Webb Jan 2003 A1
20030014447 White Jan 2003 A1
20030025734 Boose et al. Feb 2003 A1
20030038842 Peck et al. Feb 2003 A1
20030041235 Meyer Feb 2003 A1
20030046657 White Mar 2003 A1
20030056071 Triece et al. Mar 2003 A1
20030058469 Buis et al. Mar 2003 A1
20030061572 McClannahan et al. Mar 2003 A1
20030062889 Ely et al. Apr 2003 A1
20030080755 Kobayashi May 2003 A1
20030088852 Lacas et al. May 2003 A1
20030097640 Abrams et al. May 2003 A1
20030105620 Bowen Jun 2003 A1
20030126947 Margaria Jul 2003 A1
20030135842 Frey et al. Jul 2003 A1
20030149961 Kawai et al. Aug 2003 A1
20030163798 Hwang et al. Aug 2003 A1
20030229482 Cook et al. Dec 2003 A1
20030233631 Curry et al. Dec 2003 A1
20040018711 Madurawe Jan 2004 A1
20040031030 Kidder et al. Feb 2004 A1
20040054821 Warren et al. Mar 2004 A1
20040153802 Kudo et al. Aug 2004 A1
20040201627 Maddocks et al. Oct 2004 A1
20040205553 Hall et al. Oct 2004 A1
20040205617 Light Oct 2004 A1
20040205695 Fletcher Oct 2004 A1
20040217799 Ichihara Nov 2004 A1
20040250231 Killian et al. Dec 2004 A1
20050024341 Gillespie et al. Feb 2005 A1
20050066152 Garey Mar 2005 A1
20050140659 Hohl et al. Jun 2005 A1
20050143968 Odom et al. Jun 2005 A9
20050240917 Wu Oct 2005 A1
20050248534 Kehlstadt Nov 2005 A1
20050280453 Hsieh Dec 2005 A1
20060015862 Odom et al. Jan 2006 A1
20060031768 Shah et al. Feb 2006 A1
20060032680 Elias et al. Feb 2006 A1
20060097991 Hotelling et al. May 2006 A1
20060150149 Chandhoke et al. Jul 2006 A1
20060273804 Delorme et al. Dec 2006 A1
20070139074 Reblewski Jun 2007 A1
20070139338 Lin et al. Jun 2007 A1
20070258458 Kapoor Nov 2007 A1
20080095213 Lin et al. Apr 2008 A1
20080186052 Needham et al. Aug 2008 A1
20080259998 Venkataraman et al. Oct 2008 A1
20080294806 Swindle et al. Nov 2008 A1
20090054129 Yoshimura et al. Feb 2009 A1
20090066427 Brennan Mar 2009 A1
20090322305 De Cremoux Dec 2009 A1
20110248692 Shehu et al. Oct 2011 A1
Foreign Referenced Citations (23)
Number Date Country
19710829 Sep 1998 DE
0308583 Mar 1989 EP
0308583 Mar 1989 EP
368398 May 1990 EP
0450863 Oct 1991 EP
0450863 Oct 1991 EP
0499383 Aug 1992 EP
0499383 Aug 1992 EP
0639816 Feb 1995 EP
0639816 Feb 1995 EP
1170671 Jan 2002 EP
1205848 May 2002 EP
1191423A2 Feb 2003 EP
1170671 Sep 2003 EP
404083405 Mar 1992 JP
5941651 Feb 1993 JP
405055842 Mar 1993 JP
06021732 Jan 1994 JP
404095408 Mar 2002 JP
9532478 Nov 1995 WO
US9617305 Jun 1996 WO
US9834376 Aug 1998 WO
US9909712 Feb 1999 WO
Non-Patent Literature Citations (887)
Entry
Pleis et al., U.S. Appl. No. 13/182,431 received Jul. 13, 2011.
Eady, Fred; “PSoc 101”; Circuit Cellar; http://www.circuitcellar.com/library/print/0804/eady169/2.htm.
Killat, Kirk; “A One-Chip Solution for Electronic Ballasts in Fluorescent Lamps”; Power Electronics; http://powerelectonics.com/mag/power—onechip—solution—electronic/.
Goodenough, F, “Analog Counterparts of FPGAS Ease System Design”, Electronic Design, Penton Publishing, Cleveland, OH, US, vol. 2 No. 21, Oct. 14, 1994, pp. 63-64, 66, 68, 7.
Harbaum, T. et al., “Design of a Flexible Coprocessor Unit”, Proceedings of the Euromicro Conference, Sep. 1999, pp. 335-342, p. 337, right hand column, line 13-p. 338, left hand column, line 4; figure 1.
“New Object Domain R3 Beta Now Available (Build 134)!” Mar. 13, 2001; <http://web.archive.org/web/200100331202605/www.objectdomain.com/domain30/index.html>; 2 pages.
“OMG XML Metadata Interchange (XMI) Specifications” 2000; 17 pages.
Electronic Tools Company; E-Studio User Manuel; 2000; retrieved from http://web.archive.org for site http://e-tools.com on Mar. 23, 2005; 77 pages.
Cover Pages Technology Reports; XML and Electronic Design Automation (EDA); Aug. 2000; retrieved from http://xml.coverpages.org on Mar. 23, 2005; 5 pages.
Microsoft Computer Dictionary “ActiveX” 2002; Microsoft Press; 5th Edition; 3 pages.
Wikipedia “XML” retrieved on Jan. 29, 2007 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XML; 16 pages.
“VHDL Samples” retrieved on Jan. 29, 2007 from http://www.csee.umbc.edu/help/VHDL/samples/samples.shtml; 10 pages.
Anonymous, “Lotus Notes FAQ—How do you generate unique document numbers?” Sep. 19, 1999; retrieved from www.keysolutions.com on Jul. 9, 2008; 1 page.
Ashok Bindra, “Programmable SoC Delivers a New Level of System Flexibility”; Electronic Design; Nov. 6, 2000; 11 pages.
Cypress MicroSystem, Inc. “Cypress Customer Forums” retrieved from <http://www.cypress.com/forums/messageview>; Nov. 30, 2004; 1 page.
Cypress MicroSystem, Inc. “PsoC Designer: Integrated Development Environment User Guide”; Rev. 1.18; Sep. 8, 2003; 193 pages.
Hamblen, “Rapid Prototyping Using Field-Programmable Logic Devices” Jun. 2000, IEEE; 9 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,062 dated Apr. 30, 2004; 9 pages.
Snyder et al., “Xilinx's A-to-Z Systems Platform” Cahners Microprocessor, the Insider's Guide to Microprocessor Hardware, Feb. 6, 2001; 6 pages.
“PSoC Technology Completely Changes 8-bit MCU System Design” Cypress MicroSystem, Inc. Feb. 19, 2001; 21 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,062 dated Dec. 8, 2003; 9 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,062 dated Sep. 25, 2003; 3 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,062 dated Jun. 27, 2003; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,062 dated Jan. 27, 2003; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,062 dated Sep. 11, 2002; 9 pages.
“PSoC Designer: Integrated Development Environment” User Guide; Revision 1.11; Last Revised Jul. 17, 2001; 109 pages.
Cypress Microsystems, “Cypress Microsystems Unveils Programmable System-on-a-Chip for Embedded Internet, Communications and Consumer Systems;” 2000, <http://www.cypressmicro.com/corporate/CY—Announces—nov—13—2000.html>; 3 pages.
Huang et al., ICEBERG, An Embedded In-Circuit Emulator Synthesizer for Microcontrollers, Proceedings of the 36th Design Automation Conference Jun. 21-26, 1999; 6 pages.
Yoo et al., “Fast Hardware-Software Co-verification by Optimistic Execution of Real Processor,” Proceedings of Design, Automation and Test in Europe Conference and Exhibition 2000; 6 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,062 dated Mar. 27, 2008; 3 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,062 dated Jan. 18, 2008; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,062 dated Jun. 22, 2007; 12 pages.
USPTO Miscellaneous Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,062 dated Jan. 30, 2006; 2 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,064 dated Sep. 21, 2006; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,064 dated Apr. 6, 2006; 19 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,064 dated Oct. 18, 2005; 22 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,064 dated Apr. 25, 2005; 15 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,064 “Method and System for Debugging through Supervisory Operating Codes and Self Modifying Codes,” Roe et al., filed on Mar. 29, 2002; 36 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,726 “Method and Apparatus for Generating Microcontroller Configuration information,” Ogami et al., filed on Oct. 24, 2001; 54 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,726 dated Feb. 6, 2007; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,726 dated Aug. 28, 2006; 10 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,726 dated Mar. 27, 2006; 8 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,726 dated Nov. 30, 2005; 10 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,726 dated Jun. 10, 2005; 10 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,726 dated Dec. 13, 2004; 7 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/818,005 “Techniques for Generating Microcontroller Configuration Information,” Ogami et al., filed on Jun. 12, 2007; 61 pages.
USPTO Requirement for Restriction/Election for U.S. Appl. No. 11/818,005 dated Jul. 14, 2009; 5 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/850,260 “Circuit and Method for Improving the Accuracy of a Crystal less Oscillator Having Dual-Frequency Modes,” Wright et al., filed on Sep. 5, 2007; 33 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/850,260 dated Mar. 6, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/644,100 dated Mar. 9, 2009; 11 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 11/644,100 dated Feb. 9, 2009; 3 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/644,100 dated Nov. 18, 2008; 12 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/644,100 dated Apr. 14, 2008; 10 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/415,588 dated Mar. 11, 2008; 6 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 11/415,588 dated Jan. 14, 2008; 3 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/415,588 dated Oct. 19, 2007; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/415,588 dated Jun. 13, 2007; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 12/218,404 dated Mar. 19, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 12/218,404 dated Sep. 30, 2008; 8 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/644,100 “Differential-to-single ended signal converter circuit and method,” Jonathon Stiff, filed on Dec. 21, 2006; 33 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/415,588: “Voltage Controlled Oscillator Delay Cell and Method,” Sivadasan et al., filed on May 1, 2006; 24 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 12/218,404: “Voltage Controlled Oscillator Delay Cell and Method,” Sivadasan et al., filed on Jul. 14, 2008; 23 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/132,894 dated Apr. 26, 2007; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/132,894 dated Dec. 19, 2006; 12 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/132,894: “Open Loop Bandwidth Test Architecture and Method for Phase Locked Loop (PLL),” Jonathon Stiff, filed on May 19, 2005; 38 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/322,044 dated May 4, 2009; 18 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/322,044 dated Nov. 25, 2008; 15 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/322,044 dated Apr. 11, 2008; 11 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 11/322,044 dated Nov. 30, 2007; 2 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/322,044 dated Sep. 21, 2007; 14 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/322,044 dated Apr. 24, 2007; 13 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/322,044: “Split charge pump PLL architecture,” Jonathon Stiff, filed on Dec. 28, 2005; 19 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/305,589 dated Feb. 4, 2005; 5 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/305,589 dated Oct. 21, 2004; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/305,589 dated Oct. 7, 2003; 6 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/305,589: “Current Controlled Delay Circuit,” Jonathon Stiff, filed on Nov. 26, 2002; 18 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/849,164: “Reduced Static Phase Error CMOS PLL Charge Pump,” Jonathon Stiff, filed on May 4, 2001; 30 pages.
Maneatis, “Low-Jitter Process-Independent DLL and PLL Based on Self-Biased Techniques,” IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. 31, No. 11, Nov. 1996; 10 pages.
Larsson, “A 2-1600-MHz CMOS Clock Recovery PLL with Low-V dd Capability,” IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. 34, No. 12, Dec. 1999; 10 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/327,217 dated Aug. 12, 2004; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/327,217 dated Apr. 30, 2004; 5 pages.
USPTO Miscellaneous Action for U.S. Appl. No. 10/327,217 dated Feb. 10, 2004; 1 page.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/327,217: “Single Ended Clock Signal Generator Having a Differential Output,” Richmond et al., filed on Dec. 20, 2002; 27 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/871,582 dated Mar. 30, 2006; 6 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/871,582 dated Feb. 1, 2006; 5 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/871,582 dated Sep. 7, 2005; 7 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/871,582: “LVDS Input Circuit with Extended Common Mode Range,” Reinschmidt et al., filed on Jun. 17, 2004; 25 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/404,891 dated Mar. 4, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/404,891 dated Dec. 8, 2004; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/404,891 dated Jun. 25, 2004; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/404,891 dated Jan. 5, 2004; 5 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/404,891 dated Jul. 10, 2003; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/404,891 dated Mar. 5, 2003; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/404,891 dated Oct. 11, 2002; 5 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/404,891: “Method, Architecture and Circuitry for Controlling Pulse Width in a Phase and/or Frequency Detector,” Scott et al., filed on Sep. 24, 1999; 17 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/226,911 dated Aug. 20, 2004; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/226,911 dated Mar. 19, 2004; 6 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/226,911: “Calibration of Integrated Circuit Time Constants,” Gehring et al., filed on Aug. 22, 2002; 32 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,149 dated Jan. 12, 2004; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,149 dated Aug. 28, 2003; 9 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,149 dated May 7, 2003; 10 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,149 dated Nov. 20, 2002; 7 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,149: “Method for Phase Locking in a Phase Lock Loop,” Moyal et al., filed on Aug. 30, 2001; 21 pages.
Durham et al., “Integrated Continuous-Time Balanced Filters for 16-bit DSP Interfaces,” IEEE, 1993; 6 pages.
Durham et al., “Circuit Architectures for High Linearity Monolithic Continuous-Time Filtering,” IEEE, 1992; 7 pages.
Durham et al., “High-Linearity Conitnuous-Time Filter in 5-V VSLI CMOS,” IEEE, 1992; 8 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/047,595: “Roving Range Control to Limit Receive PLL Frequency of Operation,” Paul H. Scott, filed on Mar. 29, 1998; 35 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/216,460: “Circuit and Method for Controlling an Output of a Ring Oscillator,” Abugharbieh et al., filed on Dec. 18, 1998; 21 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/471,914: “Reference-Free Clock Generator and Data Recovery PLL,” Dalmia et al., filed on Dec. 23, 1999; 32 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/471,576: “Reference-Free Clock Generation and Data Recovery PLL,” Kamal Dalmia, filed on Dec. 23, 1999; 30 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/083,442: “Method/Architecture for a Low Gain PLL with Wide Frequency Range,” Meyers et al., filed on Feb. 26, 2002; 28 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/470,665: “Digital Phase/Frequency Detector, and Clock Generator and Data Recovery PLL Containing the Same,” Kamal Dalmia, filed on Dec. 23, 1999; 26 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/893,161: “Architecture of a PLL with Dynamic Frequency Control on a PLD,” Michael T. Moore, filed on Jun. 27, 2001; 32 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/608,753: “PLL Lockout Watchdog,” Wilson et al., filed on Aug. 24, 2004; 24 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/398,956: “Frequency Acquisition Rate Control in Phase Lock Loop Circuits,” Moyal et al., filed on Sep. 17, 1999; 35 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/747,262:“Linearized Digital Phase-Locked Loop,” Williams et al., filed on Dec. 22, 2000; 9 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/981,448: “Oscillator Tuning Method,” Lane T. Hauck, filed on Oct. 17, 2001; 28 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/538,989: “Memory Based Phase Locked Loop,” Rengarajan S. Krishnan, filed on Mar. 30, 2000; 27 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/048,905: “Programmable Clock Generator,” Mann et al., filed on Mar. 26, 1998; 42 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 08/865,342: “Programmable Clock Generator,” Mann et al., filed on May 29, 1997; 41 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/293,392 dated Mar. 10, 2004; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/293,392 dated Oct. 16, 2003; 6 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/293,392: “Low Voltage Receiver Circuit and Method for Shifting the Differential Input Signals of the Receiver Depending on a Common Mode Voltage of the Input Signals,” Maher et al., filed on Nov. 13, 2002; 20 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/288,003 dated Jan. 14, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/288,003 dated Oct. 6, 2004; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/288,003 dated Apr. 7, 2004; 9 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/288,003 : “Low Voltage Differential Signal Driver Circuit and Method,” Roper et al., filed on Nov. 4, 2002; 30 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,777 dated Mar. 9, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 11/200,619 dated May 11, 2009; 3 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/200,619 dated Mar. 3, 2009; 14 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/200,619 dated Aug. 27, 2008; 13 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/200,619: “Providing hardware independence to automate code generation of processing device firmware,” Snyder et al., filed on Aug. 10, 2005; 41 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,922 dated Apr. 9, 2009; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,922 dated Oct. 21, 2008; 12 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,922 dated Apr. 30, 2008; 10 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,922 dated Oct. 15, 2007; 10 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,922: “Design model for a hardware device-independent method of defining embedded firmware for programmable systems,” McDonald et al., filed on Aug. 10, 2005; 31 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,627 dated Dec. 12, 2008; 17 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,627 dated Apr. 29, 2008; 21 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,627 dated Nov. 16, 2007; 16 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,627: “Method and an apparatus to design a processing system using a graphical user interface,” Ogami et al., filed on Aug. 10, 2005; 37 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,808 dated Feb. 13, 2006; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,808 dated Oct. 19, 2005; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,808 dated Apr. 14, 2005; 8 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,808: “Automatic generation of application program interfaces, source code, interrupts, and data sheets for microcontroller programming,” Bartz et al., filed on Nov. 19, 2001; 67 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/109,979 dated Mar. 14, 2006; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/109,979 dated Jun. 30, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/109,979: “Graphical user interface with logic unifying functions,” Anderson et al., filed on Mar. 29, 2002; 100 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,781: “System and method for decoupling and iterating resources associated with a module,” Ogami et al., filed on Nov. 19, 2001; 40 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,775: “User defined names for registers in memory banks derived from configurations,” Ogami et al., filed on Nov. 19, 2001; 29 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,819 dated Jan. 11, 2005; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,819 dated Jul. 13, 2004; 4 pages.
USPTO Miscellaneous Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,819 dated Dec. 14, 2001; 1 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,819: “System and method for creating a boot file utilizing a boot template,” Ogami et al., filed on Nov. 19, 2001; 43 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,761 dated Jan. 14, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,761 dated Aug. 26, 2004; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,761 dated Mar. 10, 2004; 6 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,761 dated Oct. 3, 2003; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,761 dated Apr. 18, 2003; 5 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,761: “Storing of global parameter defaults and using them over two or more design projects,” Ogami et al., filed on Nov. 19, 2001; 37 pages.
Wang, et al. “Synthesizing Operating System Based Device Drivers in Embedded Systems,” Oct. 1-3, 2003; ACM; 8 pages.
Lutovac et al. “Symbolic Computation of Digital Filter Transfer Function Using MATLAB,” Proceedings of 23rd International Conference on Microelectronics (MIEL 2002), vol. 2 NIS, Yugoslavia; 4 pages.
Nouta et al. “Design and FPGA-Implementation of Wave Digital Bandpass Filters with Arbitrary Amplitude Transfer Characteristics,” Proceedings of IEEE International Symposium on Industrial Electronics; 1998, vol. 2; 5 pages.
Xilinx, Virtex-II Pro Platform FPGA Developer's Kit, “How Data2BRAM Fits in with Hardware and Software Flows,” Chapter 2: Using Data2BRAM; Jan. 2003 Release; 2 pages.
PCT Preliminary Report on Patentability (Chapter 1 of the Patent Cooperation Treaty), PCT/US2005/028793, filed Aug. 12, 2005, mailed Dec. 21, 2007; 2 pages.
PCT Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority for PCT/US2005/028793, filed Aug. 12, 2005, mailed Nov. 19, 2007; 7 pages.
PCT International Search Report of the International Searching Authority for PCT/US05/28793, filed Aug. 12, 2005, mailed Nov. 19, 2007; 5 pages.
International Search Report and Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority for PCT/US05/28898, filed Aug. 12, 2005, mailed Mar. 6, 2007; 6 pages.
Burogs et al., “Power Converter Analysis and Design using Matlab: A Transfer Function Approach,” Proceedings of IEEE International Symposium on Industrial Electronics 1998, vol. 2; 6 pages.
Efstathiou, “Analog Electronics: Basic Circuits of Operational Amplifiers,” <http://web.archive.org/web/20021231045232> Dec. 31, 2002, version, retrieved from the Internet Archives; 10 pages.
PCT International Search Report for PCT/US05/28791, filed Aug. 12, 2005, mailed Mar. 31, 2008; 4 pages.
PCT International Written Opinion for PCT/US05/28791, filed Aug. 12, 2005, mailed Mar. 31, 2008; 8 pages.
Kory Hopkins, “Definition;” Jan. 16, 1997; <http://www.cs.sfu.ca/cs/people/GradStudent.htm>; 1 page.
Ebeling et al., “Validating VLSI Circuit Layout by Wirelist Comparison;” Sep. 1983; in proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Computer Aided Design (ICCAD-83); 2 pages.
“The Gemini Netlist Comparison Project;” <http://www.cs.washington.edu/research/projects/lis/www/gemini/gemini.html> larry@cs.washington.edu; Mar. 19, 2002; 2 pages.
Ohlrich et al., “Sub-Gemini: Identifying Subcircuits using a Fast Subgraph Isomorphism Algorithm;” Jun. 1993; in proceedings of the 30th IEEE/ACM Design Automation Conference; 7 pages.
Ebling, “Gemini II: A Second Generation Layout Validation Program;” 1988; in proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Computer Aided Design (ICCAD-88); 4 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 12/132,527: “System and Method for Performing Next Placements and Pruning of Disallowed Placements for Programming an Integrated Circuit;” Ogami et al., filed on Jun. 3, 2008; 44 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 12/356,468: “System and Method for Dynamically Generating a Configuration Datasheet,” Anderson et al.; filed on Jan. 20, 2009; 27 pages.
Written Opinion of the International Search Authority for International Application No. PCT/US08/60680 dated Aug. 15, 2008; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/475,879 dated Oct. 22, 2004; 7 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/475,879 dated Mar. 4, 2002; 3 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/475,879 dated Dec. 31, 2001; 3 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/475,879 dated Oct. 11, 2001; 10 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/475,879 dated Mar. 8, 2001; 6 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/475,879: “Programmable Logic Device,” Lacey et al.; filed on Dec. 30, 1999; 50 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/475,808: “Configurable Memory for Programmable Logic Circuits,” Lacey et al., filed on Dec. 30, 1999; 24 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/475,808 dated Jun. 6, 2001; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/475,808 dated Nov. 6, 2001; 8 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/137,497: “Reconfigurable Testing System and Method,” Pleis et al., filed on May 1, 2002; 40 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/137,497 dated Nov. 5, 2004; 17 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/137,497 dated May 5, 2005; 13 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/137,497 dated Sep. 22, 2005; 21 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/137,497 dated Mar. 13, 2006; 15 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/137,497 dated Aug. 2, 2006; 21 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/137,497 dated Jan. 24, 2007; 12 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/137,497 dated Jul. 20, 2007; 4 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/653,050: “Method and System for Programming a Memory Device,” Snyder et al., filed on Aug. 29, 2003; 69 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/653,050 dated Apr. 6, 2004; 7 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/653,050 dated Jul. 29, 2004; 3 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/172,670: “Method and System for Programming a Memory Device,” Snyder et al., filed on Jun. 13, 2002; 66 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/986,338: Reconfigurable Testing System and Method, Pleis et al., filed on Nov. 20, 2007; 41 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/965,291 dated May 5, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/965,291 dated Dec. 17, 2008; 8 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/965,291: “Universal Digital Block Interconnection and Channel Routing,” Snyder et al., filed on Dec. 27, 2007; 31 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/986,338 dated May 7, 2009; 1 page.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/273,708: “Capacitance Sensor Using Relaxation Oscillators,” Snyder et al., filed on Nov. 14, 2005; 33 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/273,708 dated Mar. 19, 2007; 16 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/273,708 dated Jul. 5, 2007; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/273,708 dated Aug. 9, 2007; 4 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/337,272: “Successive Approximate Capacitance Measurement Circuit” Warren Snyder, filed on Jan. 20, 2006 29 pages.
USPTO Requirement for Restriction/Election for U.S. Appl. No. 11/337,272 dated Sep. 11, 2006; 5 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/337,272 dated Oct. 24, 2006; 9 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/337,272 dated Feb. 2, 2007; 11 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 11/337,272 dated Apr. 3, 2007; 3 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/337,272 dated May 17, 2007; 11 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/337,272 dated Aug. 15, 2007; 9 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/983,291: “Successive Approximate Capacitance Measurement Circuit,” Warren Snyder, filed on Nov. 7, 2007; 26 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/983,291 dated Mar. 9, 2009; 9 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/698,660: “Configurable Bus,” Kutz et al., filed on Jan. 25, 2007; 35 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/698,660 dated Dec. 2, 2008; 12 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/698,660 dated May 28, 2009; 12 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/709,866: “Input/Output Multiplexer Bus,” Dennis Sequine, filed on Feb. 21, 2007; 33 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/709,866 dated Nov. 7, 2008; 14 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/709,866 dated Apr. 7, 2009; 8 pages.
Sedra et al., “Microelectronic Circuits,” 3rd Edition, 1991, Oxford University Press, Feb. 5, 2007; 20 pages.
Van Ess, David; “Simulating a 555 Timer with PSoC,” Cypress Semiconductor Corporation, Application Note AN2286, May 19, 2005; 10 pages.
Cypress Semiconductor Corporation, “Fan Controller CG6457AM and CG6462AM,” PSoC Mixed Signal Array Preliminary Data Sheet; May 24, 2005; 25 pages.
Cypress Semiconductor Corporation, “PSoC Mixed-Signal Controllers,” Production Description; <http://www.cypress.com/portal/server>; retrieved on Sep. 27, 2005; 2 pages.
Cypress Semiconductor Corporation, “CY8C21×34 Data Sheet,” CSR User Module, CSR V.1.0; Oct. 6, 2005; 36 pages.
Chapweske, Adam; “The PS/2 Mouse Interface,” PS/2 Mouse Interfacing, 2001, retrieved on May 18, 2006; 11 pages.
Cypress Semiconductor Corporation, “Cypress Introduces PSoC(TM)-Based Capacitive Touch Sensor Solution,” Cypress Press Release; May 31, 2005; <http://www.cypress.com/portal/server>; retrieved on Feb. 5, 2007; 4 pages.
Seguine, Ryan; “Layout Guidelines for PSoC CapSense,” Cypress Semiconductor Corporation, Application Note AN2292; Jul. 22, 2005; 13 pages.
Lee, Mark; “EMC Design Considerations for PSoC CapSense Applications,” Cypress Semiconductor Corporation, Application Note AN2318; Sep. 16, 2005; 6 pages.
Cypress Semiconductor Corporation, “Release Notes srn017,” Jan. 24, 2007; 3 pages.
Cypress Semiconductor Corporation, “PSoC CY8C20×34 Technical Reference Manual (TRM),” PSoC CY8C20×34 TRM, Version 1.0, 2006; 220 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/166,622: “Touch wake for electronic devices,” Beard et al., filed Jun. 23, 2005; 22 pages.
International Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority for International Application No. PCT/US2006/09572 dated Jan. 10, 2008; 5 pages.
International Search Report for International Application No. PCT/US2006/09572 dated Jan. 10, 2008; 2 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/024,093 dated Sep. 10, 2002; 7 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/024,093: “Configurable Memory for Programmable Logic Circuits,” Lacey et al., filed on Dec. 18, 2001; 25 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/088,028: “Method and Circuit for Rapid Alignment of Signals,” Moyal et al., filed on Nov. 13, 2007; 34 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/088,028 dated Jul. 2, 2007; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/088,028 dated Jan. 26, 2007; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/088,028 dated Jun. 16, 2006; 8 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/985,340: “Method and Circuit for Rapid Alignment of Signals,” Moyal et al., filed on Nov. 13, 2007; 34 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/985,340 dated Jun. 2, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Requirement for Restriction for U.S. Appl. No. 11/985,340 dated Mar. 16, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/865,672 dated Jul. 17, 2009; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/859,547 dated Oct. 1, 2009; 9 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/967,243 dated Sep. 17, 2009; 9 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/967,240 dated Jun. 10, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/857,947 dated Mar. 30, 2009; 18 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 12/104,672 dated Aug. 26, 2009; 11 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 12/060,128 dated Apr. 29, 2009; 11 pages.
International Search Report of the International Searching Authority for International Application No. PCT/US08/60695 dated Jul. 22, 2009; 3 pages.
Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority for International Application No. PCT/US08/60695 dated Jul. 22, 2009; 6 pages.
Azim et al., “A Custom DSP Chip to Implement a Robot Motion Controller Proceedings of the IEEE Custom Integrated Circuits Conference,” May 1988, pp. 8.7.1-8.7.5; 6 pages.
Catthoor et al., “Architectural Strategies for an Application-Specific Synchronous Multiprocessor Environment,” IEEE transactions on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing; vol. 36, No. 2, Feb. 1988, pp. 265-284; 20 pages.
International Search Report of the International Searching Authority for International Application No. PCT/US08/60696 dated Sep. 22, 2008; 2 pages.
International Search Report of the International Searching Authority for International Application No. PCT/US08/60698 dated Sep. 5, 2008; 2 pages.
Shahbahrami et al., “Matrix Register File and Extended Subwords: Two Techniques for Embedded Media Processors,” ACM, May 2005; 9 pages.
Jung et al., “A Register File with Transposed Access Mode,” 2000, IEEE; 2 pages.
International Search Report of the International Searching Authority for International Application No. PCT/US08/60681 dated Sep. 12, 2008; 2 pages.
Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority for International Application No. PCT/US08/60681 dated Sep. 12, 2008; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/965,677 dated Sep. 10, 2009; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/965,677 dated Mar. 10, 2009; 10 pages.
Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority for International Application No. PCT/US08/60696 dated Sep. 22, 2008; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/238,966 dated Aug. 5, 2009; 5 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/033,027 dated Sep. 2, 2009; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,478 dated Aug. 4, 2009; 17 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,478 dated Jun. 30, 2009; 3 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,478 dated Apr. 20, 2009; 16 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,217 dated Sep. 17, 2009; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,217 dated Jun. 8, 2009; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Dec. 4, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Aug. 26, 2009; 6 pages.
USPTO Ex Parte Quayle Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,115 dated Aug. 20, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,601 dated Jul. 9, 2009; 11 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/818,005 dated Nov. 23, 2009; 8 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,778 dated Jun. 17, 2009; 3 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,600 dated Aug. 25, 2009; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,600 dated Apr. 3, 2009; 5 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,762 dated Oct. 30, 2009; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,762 dated Jul. 16, 2009; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,848 dated May 12, 2009; 16 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,767 dated May 12, 2009; 21 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,771 dated Nov. 25, 2009; 12 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,765 dated Sep. 3, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,782 dated Oct. 27, 2009; 9 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,782 dated May 15, 2009; 10 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/986,338 dated Oct. 19, 2009; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,777 date Aug. 6, 2009; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/008,096 dated Oct. 21, 2009; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/008,096 dated Jun. 5, 2009; 12 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/985,340 dated Nov. 9, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,627 dated Sep. 21, 2009; 3 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,627 dated Jul. 7, 2009; 19 pages.
USPTO Miscellaneous Action for U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,922 dated Oct. 1, 2009; 2 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/200,619 dated Jun. 17, 2009; 12 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/166,622 dated Sep. 29, 2009; 11 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 11/166,622 dated May 27, 2009; 3 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/166,622 dated Mar. 10, 2009; 11 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 12/218,404 dated Nov. 3, 2009; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 12/218,404 dated Jul. 10, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/709,866 dated Aug. 4, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/698,660 dated Oct. 7, 2009; 12 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 11/698,660 dated Jul. 31, 2009; 3 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/983,291 dated Oct. 22, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/983,291 dated Aug. 12, 2009; 10 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/322,044 dated Oct. 19, 2009; 10 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/644,100 dated Aug. 19, 2009; 12 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 11/850,260 dated Nov. 2, 2009; 3 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/850,260 dated Aug. 21, 2009; 9 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,767 dated Dec. 7, 2009; 22 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/698,660 dated Feb. 16, 2010; 14 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,765 dated Dec. 22, 2009; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,600 dated Jan. 4, 2010; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,217 dated Jan. 11, 2010; 7 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,777 dated Jan. 15, 2010; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/965,291 dated Jan. 13, 2010; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,115 dated Jan. 29, 2010; 9 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/238,966 dated Feb. 1, 2010; 4 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,601 dated Jan. 5, 2010; 13 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,848 dated Dec. 10, 2009; 16 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/008,096 dated Feb. 1, 2010; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,627 dated Dec. 24, 2009; 22 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/200,619 dated Jan. 4, 2010; 18 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/644,100 dated Dec. 16, 2009; 13 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/850,260 dated Jan. 14, 2010; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/033,027 dated Feb. 18, 2010; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,762 dated Feb. 22, 2010; 7 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/986,338 dated Feb. 16, 2010; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 12/136,557 dated Mar. 15, 2010; 10 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/965,677 dated Feb. 12, 2010; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/985,340 dated Feb. 19, 2010; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 12/218,404 dated Feb. 16, 2010; 7 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/709,866 dated Feb. 16, 2010; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,581 dated Aug. 12, 2005; 12 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,581 dated Mar. 5, 2010; 9 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,581 dated Sep. 1, 2009; 18 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,581 dated May 11, 2009; 21 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,581 dated Nov. 26, 2008; 20 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,581 dated Jun. 11, 2008; 14 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,581 dated Nov. 27, 2007; 15 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,581 dated Jul. 13, 2007; 15 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,581 dated Jan. 10, 2007; 14 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,581 dated Aug. 10, 2006; 13 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,581 dated Feb. 24, 2006; 11 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Mar. 23, 2010; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,765 dated Mar. 31, 2010; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 12/104,672 dated Jan. 11, 2010; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/799,439 dated Nov. 2, 2007; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/799,439 dated May 29, 2008; 8 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/799,439 dated Dec. 18, 2008; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/799,439 dated Jun. 25, 2009; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/799,439 dated Feb. 5, 2010; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/347,189 dated Sep. 27, 2007; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/347,189 dated Jun. 8, 2007; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 12/070,547 dated Feb. 24, 2010; 4 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 12/070,547 dated Oct. 30, 2009; 5 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 12/070,547 dated Jun. 3, 2009; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,922 dated Jun. 11, 2010; 12 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,062 dated Jun. 29, 2010; 4 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/818,005 dated May 24, 2010; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 12/132,527 dated Apr. 29, 2010; 7 pages.
Vixel, “InSpeed SOC 320 Embedded Storage Switch,” 2003, Vixel, pp. 1-5; 5 pages.
A.F. Harvey, “DMA Fundamentals on Various PC Platforms,” 2001, 2004, National Instruments Corporation, pp. 1-19; 19 pages.
Balough et al., “White Paper: Comparing IP Integration Approaches for FPGA Implementation,” Feb. 2007, Version 1.1, Altera, pp. 1-7; 7 pages.
John Mangino, “Using DMA with High Performance Peripherals to Maximize System Performance,” 2007, Texas Instruments, pp. 1-23; 23 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 12/060,176 dated Mar. 30, 2010; 22 pages.
The Written Opinion of the International Search Report for International Application No. PCT/US10/33626 mailed Jun. 24, 2010; 5 pages.
International Search Report for International Application No. PCT/US10/33626 mailed Jun. 24, 2010; 3 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/765,400: “Autonomous Control in a Programmable System,” Sullam et al., filed on Apr. 22, 2010; 30 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/057,149: “Power Management Architecture, Method and Configuration System,” Kenneth Ogami, filed on Mar. 27, 2008; 34 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/058,569: “Configuration of Programmable IC Design Elements,” Best et al., filed on Mar. 28, 2008; 19 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/004,833: “Systems and Methods for Dynamically Reconfiguring a Programmable System on a Chip,” Ogami et al., filed on Dec. 21, 2007; 40 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,817 dated May 9, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,817 dated Jan. 12, 2005; 5 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,817 dated Jun. 8, 2004; 7 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/327,207 dated Jun. 11, 2007; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/327,207 dated Dec. 26, 2006; 5 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/327,207 dated Jul. 21, 2006; 12 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/327,207 dated Mar. 2, 2006; 13 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/327,207 dated Sep. 20, 2005; 11 pages.
USPTO Miscellaneous Action for U.S. Appl. No. 10/327,207 dated May 13, 2003; 1 page.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,570 dated May 19, 2005; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,570 dated Jan. 26, 2005; 9 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,570 dated Sep. 10, 2004; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,570 dated Mar. 25, 2004; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,570 dated Oct. 7, 2003; 6 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,570 dated Aug. 14, 2003; 3 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,570 dated May 30, 2003; 9 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,570 dated Jan. 2, 2003; 7 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,571 dated Sep. 13, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,571 dated May 23, 2005; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,571 dated Jul. 12, 2004; 9 pages.
M. Mooris Mano, “Computer System Architecture,” 1982, Prentice-Hall, 2nd Edition, pp. 261-264 and 435-440; 14 pages.
Dirk Killat, “A One-Chip Solution for Electronic Ballasts in Fluorescent Lamps,” Power Electronics, <http://powerelectronics.com/mag/power—onechip—solution—electronic/>, dated Mar. 1, 2004, accessed Sep. 13, 2005; 4 pages.
Fred Eady, “PSoC 101,” Circuit Cellar, Aug. 2004, accessed Sep. 13, 2005, <http://www.circuitcellar.com/library/print/0804/eady169/2.htm>; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/803,030 dated Jan. 8, 2007; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/803,030 dated Jun. 8, 2005; 4 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/058,586: “System and Method for Monitoring a Target Device,” Ogami et al., filed on Mar. 28, 2008; 41 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/058,534: “System and Method for Controlling a Target Device,” Ogami et al., filed on Mar. 28, 2008; 40 pages.
USPTO Miscellaneous Action for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,581 dated Jun. 23, 2010; 6 pages.
USPTO Miscellaneous Action for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,478 dated Feb. 23, 2010; 5 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,478 dated Jun. 2, 2010; 11 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/985,340 dated Jun. 9, 2010; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/850,260 dated Jul. 2, 2010; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 12/060,128 dated Oct. 19, 2009; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,338 dated Apr. 30, 2010; 2 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 11/818,005 dated Jul. 30, 2010; 3 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,627 dated Aug. 5, 2010; 3 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/201,627 dated May 24, 2010; 26 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/166,622 dated Jun. 22, 2010; 11 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/166,622 dated Mar. 18, 2010; 12 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/698,660 dated May 21, 2010; 15 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 11/644,100 dated Jul. 21, 2010; 3 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/644,100 dated May 19, 2010; 13 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/865,672 dated Dec. 30, 2009; 6 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/857,947 dated Oct. 14, 2009; 22 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/857,947 dated Feb. 3, 2010; 23 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/857,947 dated Jul. 21, 2010; 15 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 12/058,569 dated Aug. 2, 2010; 9 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/968,145 dated Aug. 2, 2010; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/968,145 dated Mar. 4, 2010; 11 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 12/104,678 dated Jul. 2, 2010; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/238,966 dated Jan. 27, 2009; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/238,966 dated Jun. 30, 2008; 12 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/238,966 dated Dec. 26, 2007; 12 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/238,966 dated Sep. 27, 2007; 9 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/238,966 dated Apr. 19, 2007; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/238,966 dated Oct. 20, 2006; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/238,966 dated Apr. 6, 2006; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/033,027 dated Mar. 31, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/033,027 dated Dec. 18, 2008; 5 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/033,027 dated Jun. 8, 2007; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/033,027 dated Dec. 21, 2006; 31 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/033,027 dated Aug. 9, 2006; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/033,027 dated Apr. 26, 2006; 26 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/033,027 dated Oct. 31, 2005; 24 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/033,027 dated Apr. 20, 2005; 20 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/033,027 dated Oct. 18, 2004; 17 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,478 dated Oct. 20, 2008; 18 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,478 dated Jun. 4, 2008; 18 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,478 dated Jan. 30, 2008; 19 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,478 dated Sep. 17, 2007; 15 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,478 dated Apr. 2, 2007; 17 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,478 dated Sep. 5, 2006; 19 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,478 dated Mar. 15, 2006; 19 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,478 dated Oct. 24, 2005; 15 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,478 dated May 16, 2005; 13 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,217 dated Jan. 28, 2009; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,217 dated Oct. 14, 2008; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,217 dated Jun. 6, 2008; 7 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,217 dated Feb. 6, 2008; 10 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,217 dated Aug. 3, 2007; 10 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,217 dated Mar. 7, 2007; 12 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,217 dated Oct. 2, 2006; 21 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,217 dated Apr. 3, 2006; 12 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,217 dated Nov. 17, 2005; 17 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,217 dated May 19, 2005; 15 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Oct. 10, 2008; 3 pages.
“An Analog PPL-Based Clock and Data Recovery Circuit with High Input Jitter Tolerance;” Sun, Reprinted from IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, 1989; 4 pages.
“WP 3.5: An Integrated Time Reference;” Blauschild, Digest of Technical Papers, 1994; 4 pages.
“Micropower CMOS Temperature Sensor with Digital Output;” Bakker et al., IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, 1996; 3 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 09/964,991: “A Novel Band-Gap Circuit for Providing an Accurate Reference Voltage Compensated for Process State, Process Variations and Temperature,” Kutz et al., filed on Sep. 26, 2001; 25 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 09/842,966: “Precision Crystal Oscillator Circuit Used in Microcontroller,” Monte Mar, filed on Apr. 25, 2001; 28 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,115 dated Oct. 9, 2008; 34 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,115 dated May 12, 2008; 33 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,115 dated Jan. 7, 2008; 30 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,115 dated Jul. 31, 2007; 28 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,115 dated Feb. 21, 2007; 25 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,115 dated Oct. 31, 2006; 19 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,115 dated Jun. 23, 2006; 20 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,115 dated Jan. 11, 2006; 15 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,115 dated Jul. 27, 2005; 11 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,115 dated Feb. 11, 2005; 86 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,338 dated Jan. 31, 2008; 21 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,338 dated Aug. 14, 2007; 19 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,338 dated Feb. 27, 2007; 23 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,338 dated Sep. 6, 2006; 11 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,338 dated May 15, 2006; 4 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,338 dated Jan. 18, 2006; 12 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,338 dated Apr. 5, 2005; 13 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/008,096 dated Feb. 10, 2005; 15 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/008,096 dated Jun. 16, 2008; 23 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/008,096 dated Sep. 4, 2007; 19 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/008,096 dated Oct. 13, 2006; 17 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/008,096 dated Nov. 25, 2005; 17 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/008,096 dated Mar. 7, 2007; 19 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/008,096 dated Apr. 17, 2006; 18 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/008,096 dated Jun. 14, 2004; 24 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/008,096 dated Jun. 24, 2005; 15 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/008,096 dated Dec. 12, 2007; 14 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/008,096 dated Dec. 22, 2008; 24 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,105 dated Dec. 4, 2006; 4 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,105 dated Jul. 13, 2006; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,105 dated Jan. 19, 2006; 5 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,105 dated Apr. 19, 2005; 9 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 09/943,062: “Apparatus and Method for Programmable Power Management in a Programmable Analog Circuit Block,” Monte Mar, filed on Aug. 29, 2001; 46 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 10/238,966: “Method for Parameterizing a User Module,” Perrin et al., filed on Sep. 9, 2002; 41 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/324,455 dated Feb. 12, 2004; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/324,455 dated Nov. 6, 2003; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/324,455 dated Aug. 21, 2003; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,859 dated Mar. 14, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,859 dated Nov. 4, 2004; 6 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,859 dated Nov. 19, 2003; 5 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,859 dated May 28, 2003; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,859 dated May 15, 2003; 6 pages.
USTPO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,834 dated May 19, 2005; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,834 dated Sep. 20, 2004; 11 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,065 dated Apr. 6, 2006; 8 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,065 dated Oct. 26, 2005; 17 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,065 dated May 20, 2005; 14 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 09/207,912: “Circuit(s), Architecture and Method(s) for Operating and/or Tuning a Ring Oscillator,” Monte Mar, filed on Dec. 9, 1998; 23 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated May 8, 2009; 6 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/935,454: “Method and Apparatus for Local and Global Power Management in a Programmable Analog Circuit,” Monte Mar, filed on Aug. 22, 2001; 51 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/923,461: “Non-Interfering Multiply-Mac (Multiply Accumulate) Circuit,” Warren Snyder, filed on Aug. 6, 2001; 25 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/924,734: “Programmable Microcontroller (PSoC) Architecture (Mixed Analog/Digital)”; Snyder et al., filed on Aug. 7, 2001; 28 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/909,045: “Digital Configurable Macro Architecture,” Warren Snyder, filed on Jul. 18, 2001; 37 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/909,109: “Configuring Digital Functions in a Digital Configurable Macro Architecture,” Warren Snyder, filed on Jul. 18, 2001; 38 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/909,047: “A Programmable Analog System Architecture,” Monte Mar, filed on Jul. 18, 2001; 60 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/930,021: “Programmable Methodology and Architecture for a Programmable Analog System”; Mar et al., filed on Aug. 14, 2001; 87 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/969,311: “Method for Synchronizing and Resetting Clock Signals Supplied to Multiple Programmable Analog Blocks,” Bert Sullam, filed on Oct. 1, 2001; 57 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/875,599: “Method and Apparatus for Programming a Flash Memory,” Warren Snyder, filed on Jun. 5, 2001; 23 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,115: “In-System Chip Emulator Architecture,” Snyder et al., filed on Oct. 10, 2001; 38 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/953,423: “A Configurable Input/Output Interface for a Microcontroller,” Warren Snyder, filed on Sep. 14, 2001; 28 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/893,050: “Multiple Use of Microcontroller Pad,” Kutz et al., filed on Jun. 26, 2001; 21 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/929,891: “Programming Architecture for a Programmable Analog System,” Mar et al., filed on Aug. 14, 2001; 82 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/969,313: “Architecture for Synchronizing and Resetting Clock Signals Supplied to Multiple Analog Programmable Analog Blocks,” Bert Sullam, filed on Oct. 1, 2001; 50 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,601 dated Nov. 14, 2006; 15 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,601 dated Mar. 8, 2006; 11 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,601 dated Sep. 21, 2005; 12 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,601 dated Mar. 24, 2005; 10 pages.
Hintz et al., “Microcontrollers”, 1992, McGraw-Hill; 11 pages.
Ganapathy et al., “Hardware Emulation for Functional Verification of K5”, Jun. 1996, 33rd Design Automation Conference Proceedings, Jun. 3-7, 1996; 4 pages.
The U.S. Appl. No. 60/243,708 “Advanced Programmable Microcontroller Device”; Snyder et al., filed on Oct. 26, 2000; 277 pages.
“Webster's Third New International Dictionary”, 1996, G. & C. Merriam Company; 3 pp. (including pp. 1328-1329).
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,848 dated Sep. 7, 2005; 3 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/957,084: “A Crystal-Less Oscillator with Trimmable Analog Current Control for Increased Stability,” Mar et al., filed on Sep. 19, 2001; 28 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/011,214: “Method and Circuit for Synchronizing a Write Operation between an On-Chip Microprocessor and an On-Chip Programmable Analog Device Operating at Different Frequencies,” Sullam et al., filed on Oct. 25, 2001; 49 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/972,319: “Method for Applying Instructions to Microprocessor in Test Mode,” Warren Snyder, filed on Oct. 5, 2001; 31 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/972,003: “Test Architecture for Microcontroller Providing for a Serial Communication Interface,” Warren Snyder, filed on Oct. 5, 2001; 32 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/972,133: “Method for Entering Circuit Test Mode,” Warren Snyder, filed on Oct. 5, 2001; 30 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/973,535: “Architecture for Decimation Algorithm,” Warren Snyder, filed on Oct. 9, 2001; 26 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/977,111: “A Frequency Doubler Circuit with Trimmable Current Control,” Shutt et al., filed on Oct. 11, 2001; 35 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/272,231: “Digital Configurable Macro Architecture,” Warren Snyder, filed on Oct. 15, 2002; 36 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 11/125,554: “A Method for a Efficient Supply to a Microcontroller,” Kutz et al., filed on May 9, 2005; 1 page.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/855,868: “Protecting Access to Microcontroller Memory Blocks,” Warren Snyder, filed on May 14, 2001; 28 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/887,923: “Novel Method and System for Interacting between a Processor and a Power on Reset to Dynamically Control Power States in a Microcontroller,” Kutz et al., filed on Jun. 22, 2001; 44 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/000,383: “System and Method of Providing a Programmable Clock Architecture for an Advanced Microcontroller,” Sullam et al., filed on Oct. 24, 2001; 34 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477: “Breakpoint Control in an In-Circuit Emulation System,” Roe et al., filed on Nov. 1, 2001; 43 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/004,197: “In-Circuit Emulator with Gatekeeper Based Halt Control,” Nemecek et al., filed on Nov. 14, 2001; 47 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/004,039: “In-Circuit Emulator with Gatekeeper for Watchdog Timer,” Nemecek et al., filed on Nov. 14, 2001; 46 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/002,217: “Conditional Branching in an In-Circuit Emulation System,” Craig Nemecek, filed on Nov. 1, 2001; 43 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,568: “Combined In-Circuit Emulator and Programmer,” Nemecek et al., filed on Nov. 1, 2001; 47 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,478: “In-Circuit Emulator and POD Synchronized Boot,” Nemecek et al., filed on Nov. 1, 2001; 44 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/887,955: “Novel Power on Reset Circuit for Microcontroller,” Kutz et al., filed on Jun. 22, 2001; 42 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/826,397: “Method and Circuit for Allowing a Microprocessor to Change its Operating Frequency on-the-Fly,” Bert Sullam, filed on Apr. 2, 2001; 24 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/893,048: “A Microcontroller having an On-Chip High Gain Amplifier,” Kutz et al., filed on Jun. 26, 2001; 22 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/912,768: “A Microcontroller having a Dual Mode Relax Oscillator that is Trimmable,” James Shutt; filed on Jul. 24, 2001; 33 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/922,419: “A Power Supply Pump Circuit for a Microcontroller,” Kutz et al., filed on Aug. 3, 2001; 38 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/922,579: “A Method for a Efficient Supply to a Microcontroller,” Kutz et al., filed on Aug. 3, 2001; 37 pages.
Bursky, “FPGA Combines Multiple Interfaces and Logic,” Electronic Design, vol. 48 No. 20, pp. 74-78 (Oct. 2, 2000); 5 pages.
Anonymous, “Warp Nine Engineering—The IEEE 1284 Experts-F/Port Product Sheet,” undated web page found at http://www.fapo.com/fport.htm; printed on Apr. 12, 2005; 2 pages.
Anonymous, “F/Port:Fast Parallel Port for the PC” Installation Manual Release 7.1, circa 1997, available for download from http://www.fapo.com/fport.htm; 25 pages.
Nam et al.; “Fast Development of Source-Level Debugging System Using Hardware Emulation”; IEEE 2000; 4 pages.
Huang et al.; “Iceberg: An Embedded In-Cicuit Emulator Synthesizer for Microcontrollers”; ACM 1999; 6 pages.
Khan et al.; “FPGA Architectures for Asic Hardware Emulators”; IEEE 1993; 5 pages.
Oh et al.; Emulator Environment Based on an FPGA Prototyping Board; IEEE 21-23; Jun. 2000; 6 pages.
Hong et al.; “An FPGA-Based Hardware Emulator for Fast Fault Emulation”; IEEE 1997; 4 pages.
Ching et al.; “An In-Curcuit-Emulator for TMS320C25”; IEEE 1994; 6 pages.
Pastermak et al.; “In-Circuit-Emulation in ASIC Architecture Core Designs”; IEEE 1989; 4 pages.
Melear; “Using Background Modes for Testing, Debugging and Emulation of Microcontrollers”; IEEE 1997; 8 pages.
Walters, Stephen; “Computer-Aided Prototyping for ASIC-Based Systems”, 1991, IEEE Design & Test of Computers; vol. 8, Issue 2; 8 pages.
Anonymous; “JEENI JTAG EmbeddedlCE Ethernet Interface”; Aug. 1999; Embedded Performance, Inc.; 3 pages.
Sedory; “A Guide to Debug”; 2004; retrieved on May 20, 2005; 7 pages.
“Microsoft Files Summary Judgement Motions”; Feb. 1999; Microsoft PressPass; retrieved on May 20, 2005 from http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/1999/feb99/Feb99/Calderapr.asp; 3 pages.
Xerox; “Mesa Debugger Documentation”; Apr. 1979; Xerox Systems Development Department; Version 5.0; 33 pages.
Stallman et al.; “Debugging with GDB the GNU Source-Level Debugger”; Jan. 1994; retrieved on May 2, 2005 from http://www.cs.utah.edu; 4 pages.
Wikipedia.org; “Von Neumann architecture”; retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Von—Neumann—architecture on Jan. 22, 2007; 4 pages.
Stan Augarten; “The Chip Collection—Introduction—Smithsonian Institute”; “State of the Art”; “The First 256-Bit Static RAM”; retrieved on Nov. 14, 2005 from http://smithsonianchips.si.edu/augarten/p24.htm; 2 pages.
“POD—Piece of Data, Plain Old Documentation, Plain Old Dos . . . ”; retrieved on Nov. 14, 2005 from http://www.auditmypc.com/acronym/Pod.asp; 2 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,771 dated Feb. 27, 2007; 8 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,771 dated Mar. 28, 2006; 9 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,771 dated Apr. 6, 2005; 7 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,771 dated Dec. 10, 2008; 12 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,771 dated Dec. 27, 2007; 15 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,771 dated May 28, 2008; 14 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,771 dated Jul. 16, 2007; 14 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,771 dated Aug. 23, 2006; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,771 dated Sep. 12, 2005; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,771 dated Sep. 22, 2004; 7 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,765 dated Apr. 3, 2007; 12 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,765 dated Apr. 4, 2008; 16 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,765 dated Apr. 17, 2006; 12 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,765 dated Sep. 19, 2007; 14 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,765 dated Sep. 26, 2008; 17 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,765 dated Oct. 2, 2006; 13 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,765 dated Oct. 5, 2005; 9 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,782 dated Jul. 9, 2008; 10 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,782 dated Jul. 24, 2007; 9 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,782 dated Sep. 21, 2006; 10 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,782 dated Nov. 3, 2005; 11 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,782 dated Jan. 29, 2007; 9 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,782 dated Mar. 28, 2006; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,782 dated Apr. 29, 2005; 11 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,782 dated Oct. 6, 2004; 11 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,782 dated Nov. 26, 2008; 10 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,782 dated Dec. 14, 2007; 8 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,765 dated Mar. 31, 2009; 18 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,778 dated Mar. 16, 2009; 26 pages.
“Pod-Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia”; retrieved on Nov. 14, 2005 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pod; 3 pages.
“pod-defintion by dict.die.net”; retrieved on Nov. 14, 2005 from http://dict.die.net/pod; 2 pages.
“In-Curcuit Emulators—descriptions of the major ICEs around”; retrieved on Nov. 14, 2005 from http://www.algonet.se/˜staffann/developer/emulator.htm; 6 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,104: “Capturing Test/Emulation and Enabling Real-Time Debugging Using FPGA for In-Circuit Emulation,” Warren Snyder, filed on Oct. 10, 2001; 35 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,767 dated Jul. 24, 2008; 21 pages.
Anonymous; “Using Debug”; 1999; Prentice-Hall Publishing; 20 pages.
Harrison et al.; “Xilinx FPGA Design in a Group Environment Using VHDS and Synthesis Tools”; Colloquium on Digital System Design Using Synthesis Techniques; Feb. 15, 1996; 4 pages.
Microsoft Press Computer User's Dictionary; 1998; 3 pages (including p. 18).
Sreeram Duvvuru and Siamak Arya, “Evaluation of a Branch Target Address Cache,” 1995; IEEE; 8 pages.
Andrew S. Tanenbaum with contributions from James R. Goodman, “Structured Computer Organization,” 1999, Prentice Hall, Fourth Edition; 32 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,338: “Method for Breaking Execution of a Test Code in DUT and Emulator Chip Essentially Simultaneously and Handling Complex Breakpoint Events,” Nemecek et al., filed on Oct. 10, 2001; 34 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,030: “Emulator Chip-Board Architecture for Interface,” Snyder et al., filed on Oct. 10, 2001; 37 pages.
Wikipedia—Main Page, retrieved on Mar. 8, 2006 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main—Page and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Introduction; 5 pages.
Wikipedia—Processor register, retrieved on Mar. 7, 2006 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Processor—register; 4 pages.
Jonathan B. Rosenburg, “How Debuggers Work” John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 1996; 259 pages.
Dahl, et al.; “Emulation of the Sparcle Microprocessor with the MIT Virtual Wires Emulation System”; 1994; IEEE; 9 pages.
Bauer et al.; “A Reconfigurable Logic Machine for Fast Event-Driven Simulation”; Jun. 1998; Design Automation Conference Proceedings; 8 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,105: “Host to FPGA Interface in an In-Circuit Emulation System,” Craig Nemecek, filed on Oct. 10, 2001; 44 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,601 dated May 23, 2006; 3 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,601 dated Jul. 29, 2004; 10 pages.
USPTO Ex Parte Qualyle Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/992,076 dated Jun. 18, 2007; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,767 dated Jul. 2, 2007; 22 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/992,076 dated Mar. 26, 2008; 23 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/992,076 dated Jul. 29, 2008; 6 pages.
UPSTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,778 dated May 15, 2006; 4 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,778 dated Jan. 8, 2009; 25 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,778 dated Feb. 5, 2007; 17 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,778 dated Feb. 15, 2006; 9 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,778 dated Dec. 20, 2007; 14 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,778 dated Mar. 29, 2005; 14 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,778 dated Jul. 14, 2008; 24 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,778 dated Jul. 19, 2007; 18 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,778 dated Sep. 1, 2005; 10 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,778 dated Sep. 18, 2006; 11 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,848 dated Jun. 14, 2005; 17 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,848 dated Jul. 25, 2006; 16 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,848 dated Aug. 10, 2007; 14 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,848 dated Nov. 24, 2008; 15 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,848 dated Jan. 26, 2006; 17 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,848 dated Jan. 29, 2007; 13 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,848 dated Feb. 22, 2008; 15 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,848 dated Dec. 21, 2004; 14 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,767 dated Jan. 11, 2007; 12 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,767 dated Jan. 15, 2009; 21 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,767 dated Mar. 6, 2006; 15 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,767 dated Apr. 6, 2005; 13 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,767 dated Dec. 27, 2007; 21 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,767 dated Jul. 17, 2006; 12 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/992,076 dated Nov. 13, 2008; 15 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,601 dated May 18, 2007; 17 pages.
USPO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/992,076 dated Nov. 29, 2007; 8 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/992,076 dated Jan. 30, 2007; 32 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/992,076 dated Aug. 10, 2006; 19 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/992,076 dated Mar. 17, 2006; 16 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/992,076 dated Nov. 21, 2005; 29 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/992,076 dated Jun. 1, 2005; 20 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,600 dated Nov. 12, 2008; 35 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,600 dated May 14, 2008; 22 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,600 dated Oct. 17, 2007; 13 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,600 dated May 15, 2007; 14 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,600 dated Dec. 8, 2006; 14 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,600 dated Jul. 17, 2006; 14 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,600 dated Feb. 13, 2006; 13 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,600 dated Aug. 23, 2005; 13 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,600 dated May 4, 2005; 16 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,600 dated Oct. 21, 2004; 37 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Nov. 10, 2008; 7 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Jun. 30, 2008; 19 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Dec. 6, 2007; 17 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Jul. 23, 2007; 19 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Jan. 22, 2007; 17 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Aug. 24, 2006; 15 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Mar. 2, 2006; 17 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Oct. 24, 2005; 18 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated May 11, 2005; 31 pages.
Ito, Sergio Akira and Carro, Luigi; “A Comparison of Microcontrollers Targeted to FPGA-Based Embedded Applications”, Sep. 2000, Proceedings of 13th Symposium on Integrated Circuits and Systems Design, Sep. 18-24, 2000; 6 pages.
Julio Faura et al.; “A Novel Mixed Signal Programmable Device With On-Chip Microprocessor”, 1997, IEEE 1997 Custom Integrated Circuits Conference; 4 pages.
Monte Mar, Bert Sullam, Eric Blom; “An architecture for a configurable Mixed-signal device”, 2003, IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, vol. 3; 4 pages.
Robinson, Gordon D; “Why 1149.1 (JTAG) Really Works”, May 1994, Conference Proceedings Electro/94 International, May 10-12, 1994, Combined Volumes; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,601 dated Oct. 4, 2007; 20 pages.
“PSoC designer: Integrated development environment, getting started 25-minute tutorial, version 1.0”, Cypress Microsystems., Cypress Microsystems, Inc. CMS10006A, Jul. 3, 2001; 25 pages.
“PSoC technology complete changes 8-bit MCU system design”, Cypress Microsystems, Inc. retrieved from <http>://www.archive.org/web/20010219005250/http://cypressmicro.com- /t . . .>, Feb. 19, 2001; 21 pages.
Specks et al., “A Mixed Digital-Analog 16B Microcontroller with 0.5MB Flash Memory, On-Chip Power Supply, Physical Nework Interface, and 40V I/O for Automotive Single-Chip Mechatronics,” IEEE, Feb. 9, 2000; 1 page.
Hsieh et al., “Modeling Micro-Controller Peripherals for High-Level Co-Simulation and Synthesis,” IEEE, 1997; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,777 dated Nov. 4, 2008; 3 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,777 dated Sep. 15, 2008; 28 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,777 dated Jul. 7, 2008; 23 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,777 dated Jan. 30, 2008; 14 pages.
USTPO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,777 dated Sep. 11, 2007; 18 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,777 dated Mar. 13, 2007; 24 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,777 dated Sep. 13, 2006; 18 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,777 dated Apr. 11, 2006; 21 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,777 dated Dec. 21, 2005; 29 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,777 dated Jul. 5, 2005; 36 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,601 dated Dec. 22, 2008; 15 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/994,601 dated Apr. 17, 2008; 24 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/033,027: “Microcontrollable Programmable System on a Chip,” Warren Snyder; filed on Oct. 22, 2001; 117 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/803,030: “Programmable Microcontrollable Architecture (Mixed Analog/Digital),” Snyder et al., filed on Mar. 16, 2004; 13 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/930,021 dated Nov. 26, 2004; 4 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/930,021 dated Aug. 31, 2004; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/930,021 dated Apr. 26, 2004; 6 pages.
USPTO Miscellaneous Action with SSP for U.S. Appl. No. 09/930,021 dated Oct. 1, 2001; 1 page.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/953,423 dated Jul. 12, 2004; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/953,423 dated Feb. 6, 2004; 5 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/957,084 dated May 18, 2004; 5 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/957,084 dated Jan. 29, 2004; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/957,084 dated Aug. 27, 2003; 8 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/957,084 dated Apr. 23, 2003; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/957,084 dated Aug. 23, 2002; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/969,313 dated Oct. 4, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/969,313 dated May 6, 2005; 9 pages.
USPTO Requirement for Restriction/Election for U.S. Appl. No. 09/969,313 dated Mar. 18, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/969,311 dated Mar. 1, 2005; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/969,311 dated Sep. 21, 2004; 4 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/969,311 dated Jul. 21, 2003; 2 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/969,311 dated Apr. 7, 2003; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/969,311 dated Nov. 6, 2002; 8 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/972,319 dated Dec. 30, 2004; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/972,319 dated Sep. 16, 2004; 9 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/972,003 dated Jul. 14, 2004; 4 pages.
USPTO Requirement for Restriction/Election for U.S. Appl. No. 09/972,003 dated May 6, 2004; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/972,003 dated Feb. 2, 2004; 10 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/972,003 dated Aug. 19, 2003; 11 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/972,133 dated Jun. 9, 2006; 6 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/972,133 dated Mar. 30, 2006; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/972,133 dated Nov. 25, 2005; 9 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/972,133 dated Aug. 31, 2005; 3 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/972,133 dated Jun. 29, 2005; 10 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/972,133 dated Mar. 8, 2005; 9 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,104 dated Oct. 19, 2006; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,104 dated Jun. 16, 2006; 8 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,104 dated Feb. 15, 2006; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,104 dated Aug. 16, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,104 dated Mar. 21, 2005; 7 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,030 dated Feb. 6, 2006; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,030 dated Oct. 20, 2005; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/975,030 dated Mar. 29, 2005; 13 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/977,111 dated Sep. 28, 2006; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/272,231 dated Mar. 8, 2004; 6 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/272,231 dated Nov. 5, 2003; 5 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/272,231 dated Jul. 14, 2003; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/125,554 dated Feb. 7, 2008; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 11/125,554 dated Apr. 24, 2007; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/125,554 dated Dec. 11, 2006; 9 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/855,868 dated Apr. 25, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/855,868 dated Aug. 26, 2004; 7 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/887,923 dated Sep. 27, 2004; 5 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/887,923 dated May 25, 2004; 7 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/875,599 dated Oct. 17, 2006; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/875,599 dated May 31, 2006; 18 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/875,599 dated Feb. 15, 2006; 18 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/875,599 dated Nov. 21, 2005; 16 pages.
USPTO Advisory Action for U.S. Appl. No. 09/875,599 dated Jun. 8, 2005; 3 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/875,599 dated Mar. 29, 2005; 20 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/875,599 dated Dec. 3, 2004; 16 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/875,599 dated Aug. 25, 2004; 17 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/875,599 dated Apr. 26, 2004; 15 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/875,599 dated Oct. 27, 2003; 13 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/004,197 dated Feb. 9, 2007; 7 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/004,197 dated Oct. 6, 2006; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/004,197 dated Apr. 3, 2006; 13 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/004,197 dated Nov. 23, 2005; 17 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/004,197 dated Jun. 6, 2005; 21 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/004,039 dated Aug. 15, 2006; 7 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/004,039 dated Apr. 11, 2006; 14 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/004,039 dated Nov. 22, 2005; 19 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/004,039 dated Jun. 6, 2005; 17 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,568 dated Mar. 17, 2006; 9 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,568 dated Oct. 26, 2005; 16 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,568 dated May 19, 2005; 16 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/887,955 dated Oct. 12, 2004; 5 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/887,955 dated May 26, 2004; 5 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/826,397 dated Oct. 7, 2004; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/826,397 dated Apr. 21, 2004; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/893,048 dated Jul. 25, 2006; 4 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/893,048 dated Jan. 12, 2006; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/893,048 dated Jul. 27, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/893,048 dated Oct. 6, 2004; 5 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/893,050 dated Jul. 5, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/893,050 dated Jan. 5, 2005; 13 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/893,050 dated Aug. 30, 2004; 13 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/893,050 dated Jan. 15, 2004; 9 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/909,047 dated May 11, 2005; 25 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/909,047 dated Feb. 15, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/909,047 dated Jul. 6, 2004; 9 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/912,768 dated Sep. 13, 2005; 5 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/912,768 dated Apr. 11, 2005; 14 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/912,768 dated Nov. 17, 2004; 13 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/912,768 dated Jun. 22, 2004; 11 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/922,579 dated Dec. 28, 2004; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/922,579 dated Aug. 18, 2004; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/923,461 dated May 12, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/923,461 dated Jul. 16, 2004; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/929,891 dated Dec. 23, 2005; 4 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/929,891 dated Jun. 15, 2005; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/929,891 dated Sep. 13, 2004; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 10/011,214 dated Apr. 11, 2005; 4 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/011,214 dated Jan. 21, 2005; 8 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/011,214 dated Aug. 13, 2004; 10 pages.
Hong et al., “Hierarchial System Test by an IEEE 1149.5 MTM-Bus Slave-Module Interface Core,” IEEE, 2000; 14 pages.
Haberl et al., “Self Testable Boards with Standard IEEE 1149.5 Module Test and Maintenance (MTM) Bus Interface,” IEEE, 1994; 6 pages.
Varma et al., “A Structured Test Re-Use Methodology for Core-Based System Chips,” IEEE, 1998; 9 pages.
Andrews, “Roadmap for Extending IEEE 1149.1 for Hierarchical Control of Locally-Stored, Standardized command Set, Test Programs,” IEEE, 1994; 7 pages.
Adham et al., “Preliminary Outline of the IEEE P1500 Scalable Architecture for Testing Embedded Cores,” 1999, IEEE; 6 pages.
Ghosh et al., “A Low Overhead Design for Testability and Test Generation Technique for Core-based Systems,” IEEE, 1997; 10 pages.
Zorian, “Test Requirements for Embedded Core-based Systems and IEEE P1500,” IEEE, 1997; 9 pages.
Zorian et al., “Testing Embedded-Core Based System Chips,” IEEE, 1998; 14 pages.
Papachristou et al., “Microprocessor Based Testing for Core-Based System on a Chip,” IEEE, 1999; 6 pages.
Maroufi et al., “Solving the I/O Bandwidth Problem in System on a Chip Testing,” IEEE, 2000; 6 pages.
Marsh, “Smart Tools Illuminate Deeply Embedded Systems,” EDN, 2000; 7 pages.
York et al., “On-chip Support Needed for SOC Debug,” Electronic Engineering Times, 1999; 2 pages.
Atmel Corporation: AT9OSC Summary: “Secure Microcontrollers for Smart Cards,” 1999; 7 pages.
Hwang et al., “Integrated circuit for automatically varying resistance in computer system, has pair of transistors connected in parallel with respective resistors such that resistors are bypassed when corresponding transistors are enabled,” Derwent Information LTD; 2002; 2 pages.
Morrison, “IBM Eyes Merchant Packaging Services,” Jul. 13, 1998; Electronic News <http://www.findarticles.com>; 4 pages.
Charles, Jr. et al., “Wirebonding: Reinventing the Process for MCMs,” Apr. 1998; IEEE 7th International Conference on Multichip Modules and High Density Packaging; 3 pages.
Tran et al., “Fine Pitch and Wirebonding and Reliability of Aluminum Capped Copper Bond Pads,” May 2000, IEEE Electronic Components and Technology Conference; 8 pages.
Song et al., “A 50% Power Reduction Scheme for CMOS Relaxation Oscillator,” IEEE, 1999; 4 pages.
“Electronic Circuit Protector-Circuit Breaker;” IBM Technical Disclosure Bulletin; vol. 36, Issue 8, Aug. 1, 1993; 1 page.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/992,076 dated Feb. 27, 2009; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,771 dated Apr. 30, 2009; 11 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,762 dated Mar. 25, 2009; 7 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,762 dated Oct. 24, 2008; 7 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,815: “A Data Driven Method and System for Monitoring Hardware Resource Usage for Programming an Electric Device,” Bartz et al., filed on Nov. 19, 2001; 36 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,762 dated Jun. 2, 2008; 6 pages.
USPTO Notice of Allowance for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,762 dated Jan. 2, 2008; 6 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,762 dated Jul. 23, 2007; 15 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,762 dated Jan. 26, 2007; 13 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,762 dated Aug. 10, 2006; 18 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,762 dated Mar. 14, 2006; 19 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,762 dated Jul. 27, 2005; 15 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/275,336: “Programmable Oscillator Scheme,” Mar et al., filed on Mar. 24, 1999; 25 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/721,316: “Programmable Oscillator Scheme,” Mar et al., filed on Nov. 22, 2000; 26 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/324,455: “Programmable Oscillator Scheme,” Mar et al., filed on Dec. 20, 2002; 23 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,859: “A System and a Method for Checking Lock Step Consistency between in Circuit Emulation and a Microcontroller while Debugging Process is in Progress,” Craig Nemecek, filed on Nov. 15, 2001; 33 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/998,834: “A System and a Method for Communication between and Ice and a Production Microcontroller while in a Halt State,” Craig Nernecek, filed on Nov. 15, 2001; 33 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 10/113,065: “System and Method for Automatically Matching Components in a Debugging System,” Nemecek et al., filed on Mar. 29, 2002; 32 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,574: “Method and System for using a Graphics user Interface for Programming an Electronic Device,” Bartz et al., filed on Nov. 19, 2001; 43 pages.
USPTO U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,816: “Datasheet Browsing and Creation with Data-Driven Datasheet Tabs within a Microcontroller Design Tool,” Bartz et al., filed on Nov. 19, 2001; 55 pages.
Stephen Walters, “Computer-Aided Prototyping for ASIC-Based Systems,” 1991, IEEE Design & Test of Computers, vol. 8, Issue 2, pp. 4-10; 8 pages.
Robert A. Blauschild, “WP 3.5: An Integrated Time Reference,” ISSCC94/Session 3, Analog Techniques/Paper WP 3.5, Feb. 1994, pp. 56-58; 4 pages.
Frank Goodenough, “Analog counterparts of FPGAS Ease System Design,” Electronic Design, Penton Publishing, Cleveland, OH, Oct. 14, 1994, vol. 42, No. 21, pp. 63-66, 68; 10 pages.
Duvvuru et al., “Evaluation of a Branch Target Address Cache,” 1995, IEEE, pp. 173-180; 8 pages.
Dick Pastemak, “In-Circuit-Emulation in ASIC Architecture Cor Designs,” IEEE, 1989, pp. P6-4.1-P6-4.4; 4 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 09/957,084: “A Crystal-Less oscillator Circuit with Trimmable Analog Current Control for Increased Stability,” Mar et al., filed Sep. 19, 2001; 29 pages.
Daniel B. Sedory, “A Guide to DEBUG,” 2004, retrieved on May 20, 2005 from http://www.geocites.com/thestarman3/asm/debug/debug2.htm, pp. 1-11; 7 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 10/033,027: “Microcontrollable Programmable System on a Chip,” Snyder, filed on Oct. 22, 2001; 117 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 10/137,497: “Reconfigurable Testing System and Method,” Pleis et al.; filed on May 1, 2002; 40 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 11/088,028: “Method and Circuit for Rapid Alignment of Signals,” Moyal et al., filed on Nov. 13, 2007; 34 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 11/166,622: “Touch Wake for electronic Devices,” Beard et al., filed on Jun. 23, 2005; 22 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 11/965,291: “Universal Digital Block Interconnection and Channel Routing,” Snyder et al., filed on Dec. 27, 2007; 31 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 11/985,340: “Method and Circuit for Rapid Alignment of Signals,” Moyal et al., filed on Nov. 13, 2007; 34 pages.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/356,468: “System and Method for Dynamically Generating a Configuration Datasheet,” Anderson et al.; filed on Jan. 20, 2009; 27 pages.
Bakker et al., “Micropower CMOS Temperature Sensor with Digital Output,” IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, Jul. 1996; 3 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,767 dated Oct. 6, 2004; 15 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Dec. 6, 2007; 13 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Jun. 30, 2008; 15 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Jul. 23, 2007; 16 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Aug. 24, 2006; 13 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Oct. 24, 2005; 13 pages
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Jan. 22, 2007; 15 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated Mar. 2, 2006; 14 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 10/001,477 dated May 11, 2005; 10 pages.
Charles Melear, “Using Background Modes for Testing, Debugging and Emulation of Microcontrollers,” IEEE, 1997, pp. 90-97; 8 pages.
“PSoC designer: Integrated development environment, getting started 25-minute tutorial, version 1.0,” Cypress Microsystems., Cypress Microsystems, Inc. CMS10006A, Jul. 3, 2001; 25 pages.
Killat, Kirk; “A One-Chip Solution for Electronic Ballasts in Fluorescent Lamps”; Power Electronics; http://powerelectonics.com/mag/power—onechip—solution—electronic/, Mar. 1, 2004.
Mano, Morris; “Computer System Architecture”; 1982; Prentice-Hall, Inc.; 2nd edition; p. 261-264 and 435-440.
Eady, Fred; “PSoc 101”; Circuit Cellar; http://www.circuitcellar.com/library/print/0804/eady169/2.htm, Aug. 2004.
Killat, Kirk; “A One-Chip Solution for Electronic Ballasts in Fluorescent Lamps”; Power Electronics; http;://powerelectonics.com/mag/power—onechip—solution—electronic/, Mar. 1, 2004.
Mano, Morris; “Computer System Architecture”; 1982; Prentic-Hall, Inc.; 2nd edition; p. 261-264 and 435-440.
U.S. Appl. No. 11/864,137 “Configurable Liquid Crystal Display Driver system, ” David Wrightet al., filed on Sep. 28, 2007; 22 pages.
Application No. PCT/US08/60699 “Active Liquid Crystal Display Drivers and Duty Cycle Operation,”filed on Apr. 17, 2008; 23 pages.
Jinbin Zhao, et al., “Steady-State and Dynamic Analysis of a Buck Converter Using a Hysteretic PWM Control” Dated 2004; 5 pages.
USPTO Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 09/989,571 dated Jan. 26, 2005; 11 pages.
USPTO Non-Final Rejection for U.S. Appl. No. 11/965,520 dated Dec. 18, 2012; 13 pages.
Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 09989817 Nov 2001 US
Child 10256829 US