CR-8000
CR-8000 is a PCB design suite launched by Japanese EDA vendor Zuken in 2011.[1] Developed to serve the needs of multi-board level design CR-8000 is a next generation replacement for CR-5000 that was originally focused on single-board design.[2] CR-8000 makes use of new technology including the integration of a tablet as an input device and the use of native 3D layout and actual 64-bit architecture.[3] The CR-8000 family features four modules – System Planner; Design Gateway; Design Force; and DFM Center. These modules cover initial system planning, detailed schematic and pcb design; and optimized manufacturing output.[4]
Tools
- System Planner: A system-level design environment for upfront planning and partitioning of electronics systems.
- Design Gateway: Platform for logical circuit design and verification of single and multi-board system-level electronic designs.
- Design Force: A complete system on package and board design and analysis solution.[5]
- DFM Center: A manufacturing preparation and output solution supporting panelization and common output formats
gollark: H.264 *de facto* is because of a simpler licensing situation, but H.265 had a horrible mess which delayed adoption.
gollark: No, and H.26*5* definitely isn't.
gollark: Get Handbrake to do conversion. It's better than playing it and screen recording.
gollark: It isn't their fault. There are ridiculous patent things surrounding H.265.
gollark: As planed.
References
- Zuken launches new PCB design suite for concept-to-manufacturing, multi-board system design
- "CR-8000: True Innovation After Fifteen Years (Or More) | Gabe on EDA Archived 2013-02-02 at the Wayback Machine
- "Building a Better Software Design Platform | Product Design and Development". Archived from the original on 2011-12-04. Retrieved 2012-08-27.
- Board design package upgraded
- "System-level PCB design environment for board design and analysis - Electronics Eetimes". Archived from the original on 2013-11-04. Retrieved 2012-08-27.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.