This is one of the quotes I like to refer to when people ask me if analog design will ever die.In today’s Information Age, the electronics industry is witnessing the disappearance of passionate and resourceful analog cell inventors. We are already at a time when many constructors of mixed-signal ICs draw their basic cells (pre-cut; some assembly required), from a library of circuits, conceived, one must assume, by the Gods. Many of these young people seriously expect that they should be able to always find the precise analog solution to some problem they are facing “out there,” perhaps at a company’s internal website; or from a book, a trade magazine, or a manufacturer’s application note. Students often ask me: “What is the best way to make a [certain analog circuit]?” I am quite baffled by this perspective, and at a loss for the “best” answer.
Barrie Gilbert, “Analog Design in the Information Age,” in Proceedings of BCTM 2001, 2001, p. 120.
I agree and disagree with Socku_84. I disagree and do believe with everyone else that analog will not die. It will always be needed but of course things will become more and more digital with technologies getting smaller and smaller. As for being an analog designer. This is not a easy task by any means. Socku is correct with saying that companies do not want to give opportunities to beginners and they always want you to have design experience! This is why for example I am back in school doing my PhD. I was doing design verification for 4 years which is checking over what the senior old guys were making. I wasn't allow do make any big design changes but instead could only recommend things. I would say 90% of the time I was correct and they would do what I recommended but I didn't get any of the experience of doing it myself. Hence going back to school to get the experience. If you go to the right school with a good program where you design chips and can build in new technologies, for example my last chip was 90nm CMOS and I hope to be in 45nm on my next chip. This is where you will get the experience to get your analog job and learn along side with the old guys! I would say you need atleast one chip under your belt to get into a design job. And just to note, you would need to build more like a system,like sigma delta converter, pipelineADC, analog sensor interface, stuff like that. I once interviewed a grad student which taped out a inverter and said he knew everything about analog design, this will not get you the design job, it didn't get him one!
hope this helps
Jgk
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