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IIT Madras and Altair Engineering India Collaborate to Add Shakti Processor to Support Portfolio of Altair Embed

Shakti processors are products of an open-source initiative by the Reconfigurable Intelligent Systems Engineering (RISE) group at IIT Madras

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DQINDIA Online
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IIT Madras

IIT Madras and Altair Engineering India, a global technology company providing solutions in simulation, high-performance computing (HPC), and artificial intelligence (AI), announced a collaboration to add the Shakti processor to the support portfolio of Altair Embed.  The Shakti processor – India’s first indigenous RISC-V processor – is the result of an initiative backed by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, Government of India, and Pratap Subrahmanyam Centre for Digital Intelligence and Secure Hardware Architecture to promote indigenous development of products that offer best-in-class security and visibility for users adopting the RISC-V technology.

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“It was exciting to build an indigenous processor from scratch and more exciting to take it to a production level. It was largely a student-driven effort backed by industry veterans who dedicate themselves to the project never-minding a large pay cut” said Prof. Kamakoti, department of computer science and engineering, IIT Madras

Altair Embed is a tool for model-based firmware development of embedded systems, including motor control, Internet of Things (IoT) devices, and vision systems. It provides a visual environment to build and validate reliable embedded systems via simulation or hardware-in-the-loop (HIL). It helps users iterate code faster and improve system efficiency, giving confidence that embedded systems are production ready.

Shakti processors are industrial-grade processors aimed at embedded applications, robotic controllers, and IoT boards. By supporting Shakti processors, Altair Embed broadens its presence in developing embedded firmware for internet connected devices.

“Altair believes that collaboration with academic institutions is a powerful and effective tool to advance technological initiatives. We have been following the open-source RISC V architecture for some time and it’s exciting to see Dr. Kamakoti and IIT Madras make such creative use of it,” said Peter Darnell, chief scientist at Altair. “It’s been a pleasure working with Prof. Kamakoti’s team.”

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