\section{Real Hardware Designs}
\frame{
-\frametitle{Is \clash{} usable?}
+\frametitle{More than just toys}
\pause
+\begin{columns}[l]
+\column{0.5\textwidth}
+\begin{figure}
+\includegraphics<2->[width=5.5cm]{reducer}
+\end{figure}
+\column{0.5\textwidth}
\begin{itemize}
- \item It can be used for more than toy examples\pause
- \item We designed a matrix reduction circuit\pause
- \item We simulated it in Haskell\pause
- \item Simulation results in VHDL match\pause
- \item Synthesis completes without errors or warnings
+ \item We implemented a reduction circuit in \clash{}\pause
+ \item Simulation results in Haskell match VHDL simulation results\pause
+ \item Synthesis completes without errors or warnings\pause
+ \item Around half speed of handcoded and optimized VHDL
\end{itemize}
-}
\ No newline at end of file
+\end{columns}
+}\note[itemize]{
+\item Toys like the poly cpu one are good to give a quick demo
+\item But we used \clash{} to design 'real' hardware
+\item Reduction circuit sums the numbers in a row of a (sparse) matrix
+\item Nice speed considering we don't optimize for it (only single example!)
+}
+
+% \begin{frame}[plain]
+% \begin{centering}
+% \includegraphics[height=\paperheight]{reducerschematic.png}
+% \end{centering}
+% \end{frame}