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Ptolemy 0.6 Instructional DSP Manual

Primary Authors

Shuvra Bhattacharyya, Joseph T. Buck, Wan-Teh Chang, Michael J. Chen, Brian L. Evans, Edwin E. Goei, Soonhoi Ha, Paul Haskell, Chih-Tsung Huang, Wei-Jen Huang, Christopher Hylands, Asawaree Kalavade, Alan Kamas, Allen Lao, Edward A. Lee, Seungjun Lee, David G. Messerschmitt, Praveen Murthy, Thomas M. Parks, José Luis Pino, Gilbert Sih, S. Sriram, Michael C. Williamson, Kennard White.

Other contributors

Anindo Banerjea, Jeff Bier, Philip Bitar, Rachel Bowers, Andrea Casotto, Stefan De Troch (IMEC), Rolando Diesta, Martha Fratt, Eric Guntvedt, Mike Grimwood, Alireza Khazeni, Ed Knightly, Ichiro Kuroda (NEC), Erick Hamilton, Richard Han, David Harrison, Holly Heine, Wai-Hung Ho, John Hoch, Sangjin Hong, Steve How, Phil Lapsley, Jonathan Lee, Wei-Yi Li, Brian Mountford, Maureen O'Reilly, Sun-Inn Shih, Mario Jorge Silva, Rick Spickelmier, Gregory Walter, Anders Wass, Andria Wong, Anthony Wong, Chris Yu (NRL).

Principal Sponsors

Government: Advanced Research Projects Agencies (ARPA), The United States Air Force, the National Science Foundation (NSF), the Office of Naval Technology (ONT) via the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL), and the State of California MICRO Program.

Industry: Bell Northern Research (BNR), The Alta Group of Cadence Design Systems, Dolby Laboratories, Hitachi America, Hitachi Ltd., LG Electronics, Lockheed-Martin, Mentor Graphics, Mitsubishi, Motorola, NEC, Philips, Rockwell, Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC).

The Ptolemy project is an ongoing research project focusing on design methodology for heterogeneous systems. Additional support for further research is always welcome.

Copyright © 1990-1997
The Regents of the University of California
All rights reserved.

Permission is hereby granted, without written agreement and without license or royalty fees, to use, copy, modify, and distribute the Ptolemy software and its documentation for any purpose, provided that the above copyright notice and the following two paragraphs appear in all copies of the software and documentation.

IN NO EVENT SHALL THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BE LIABLE TO ANY PARTY FOR DIRECT, INDIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE AND ITS DOCUMENTATION, EVEN IF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS ANY WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE SOFTWARE PROVIDED HEREUNDER IS ON AN "AS IS" BASIS, AND THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA HAS NO OBLIGATION TO PROVIDE MAINTENANCE, SUPPORT, UPDATES, ENHANCEMENTS, OR MODIFICATIONS.

About the Cover

The image on the cover shows the retrogade motion of a planet, in which it appears to stop in its orbit and reverse direction before continuing on. Claudius Ptolemy, an astronomer from the second century A. D, codified the Greek geocentric view of the universe, and rationalized the apparent retrograde motion of the planets using epicycles. The Ptolemaic system remained the accepted wisdom until the Polish scholar Copernicus proposed a heliocentric view in 1543.


Trademarks

Sun Workstation, OpenWindows, SunOS, Sun-3, Sun-4, SPARC, and SPARCstation are trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc.

Unix is a trademark of Unix Systems Laboratories, Inc.

PostScript is a trademark of Adobe Systems, Inc.



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ptolemy@eecs.berkeley.edu
Copyright © 1990-1997, University of California. All rights reserved.