X-Git-Url: https://git.stderr.nl/gitweb?a=blobdiff_plain;f=reducer.lhs;h=4d74c68ed188bc00b66f31730421be46ba86a204;hb=bb178ef5c75d6adf38295303902670365634319c;hp=f71d1f62a270dfd15bdf702ae43175bbddc5e120;hpb=715d9487c4e666cef21e89f0735d23a4f5ab2d27;p=matthijs%2Fmaster-project%2Fhaskell-symposium-talk.git diff --git a/reducer.lhs b/reducer.lhs index f71d1f6..4d74c68 100644 --- a/reducer.lhs +++ b/reducer.lhs @@ -2,15 +2,22 @@ \frame{ \frametitle{More than just toys} \pause +TODO: Plaatje van de reducer \begin{itemize} - \item We designed a matrix reduction circuit\pause + \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 It runs at half the speed of a hand-coded VHDL design + \item Around half speed of handcoded and optimized VHDL \pause \end{itemize} }\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 Half speed is nice, considering we don't optimize for speed -} \ No newline at end of file +\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}