Hi Mike,
I tried sending you a mail there.
If you are still interested send me a mail as we can set you up with
an Eval board.
Eoin
Reply by ●December 5, 20072007-12-05
>> Lattice: Despite the abysmal experience of a visit by the UK/Ireland
>> Sales manager...
>I recently started working for a Lattice distributor in Ireland / UK
>and I am fairly shocked by your experience.
:
:
>Eoin Dowling
>FMG Electronics
I should probably make it clear that our poor experience was not with
FMG Electronics.
Mike
Reply by ●December 5, 20072007-12-05
Hi Mike,
I recently started working for a Lattice distributor in Ireland / UK
and I am fairly shocked by your experience.
> Lattice: Despite the abysmal experience of a visit by the UK/Ireland
> Sales manager, I was still keen to learn of competing products, so I
> attended a seminar arranged by a distributor. This was excellent, so
In my own experience Lattice sales and FAE support has been very
good.
> I made enquiries about buying a development kit. It seemed that the
> XP10 demo board would be best and the distributor was offering this at
> the "special" price of $555.
>
I have got a feeling maybe they have quoted you for an XP2 standard
eval board.
XP2 was released about 6-8 months ago and would have been around that
price when it came out first.
XP2 is the latest NV based device family which is on a 90nm
Flexi:Flash based arch.
Regards
Eoin Dowling
FMG Electronics
Reply by austin●November 20, 20072007-11-20
Luc,
I understand your decision. And, I hope all goes well with your project.
I will say that after what happened during the introduction of V4 FX,
that Xilinx has placed many "gates" and "systems" to prevent a
re-occurrence of that terrible time.
To that end, the release of Virtex 5, and the GTP's, has been a real
pleasure (for us, and our customers).
Austin
Reply by ●November 20, 20072007-11-20
Wow, how a discussion can evolve from a single reply from Austin to
contact my disti to a discussion about the distribution landscape in
Europe.
At Austin I would like to say: Austin, I've contacted my disti, but
they don't carry Xilinx. I'm sorry, I'm a Lattice user, so if I would
concider Xilinx (or Altera) the disti should contact me, shouldn't
they?
At all they other posters in this discussion: yes, you are right,
distribution has changed, but I wouldn't generalize this statement.
There are still good FAE's in this world. But the supplier should
train them well, and let them do their job, get experienced, find the
best solution (even if this is not in line with the directives from
the supplier to sell the newest part), ...
Concider this statement: distribution FAE's are the sausage between
the hot dog. They are sitting between the supplier and the customer
and are also trying to do what they are payed for.
At the end, I haven't found out the latest and greatest from Xilinx -
and as long as the parts aren't available in production, I will not
concider them for a new design. The ECP2M that I'm using is in
production, I get my parts at a decent price (better than the "one
off" price at Digikey), and I get from time to time annoying questions
from the disti FAE. But that's life I guess. (refering to Austin)
At least, I'm happy that my design is working. Now I can look for
someone who can build it in smaller quantities. But that's another
discussion, isn't it?
Luc
On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 18:24:03 +0000, Jonathan Bromley
<jonathan.bromley@MYCOMPANY.com> wrote:
>On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 10:00:22 -0800, austin <austin@xilinx.com> wrote:
>
>>If one argues that FPGA technology needs to become more user friendly,
>>and easier to use, in order to make inroads into all possible
>>applications, your experience is merely one example of an opportunity
>>(for Xilinx).
>
>Please don't forget that the experiences I was reporting
>(ranting about) are a decade old. To a large extent I think
>it's an opportunity you've already grasped - webshop,
>excellent online documentation, free software downloads
>for smaller customers, good appnotes.... and, dare I say,
>informal access to top-notch factory expertise via public
>media such as this group.
>
>>Sure, we could say "well, that is life" but who would we be serving?
>
>Nah. You wouldn't do that. You need to eat too :-)
>
>Like I said: it seems to me that major FPGA vendors have somewhat
>taken that opportunity already. Almost without exception, they
>(or at least their FPGA business) started small, with reasonably
>close relations between factory and even the smaller customers.
>As they've grown they seem to have remembered that heritage,
>and the quality of technical information available through
>FPGA vendors' websites and other resources is pretty good.
>(Yes, I know people complain all the time. And you put a
>brave face on it, because you know that there's at least a
>grain of truth in most complaints, and you want happy customers
>and happy potential customers. We appreciate it. Really.)
>
>I see the result of all this being a sidelining of the traditional
>distributor role as intermediary between factory and customer.
>Instead, the successful distributors either act as supermarkets
>(in which case let us treat them as such, and punish with our
>lack of custom those who can't keep their shelves full of
>attractive products at attractive prices) or act as agencies
>helping large customers collaborate effectively with the
>factory to ensure a good deal for both parties. The
>traditional component disti, who tries to erect walls between
>customer and factory to protect his own revenue monopoly
>at the customer's expense, is surely a dinosaur whose
>meteorite is already bright in the sky. Their passing
>will be mourned by but few.
Reply by Jonathan Bromley●November 19, 20072007-11-19
On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 10:00:22 -0800, austin <austin@xilinx.com> wrote:
>If one argues that FPGA technology needs to become more user friendly,
>and easier to use, in order to make inroads into all possible
>applications, your experience is merely one example of an opportunity
>(for Xilinx).
Please don't forget that the experiences I was reporting
(ranting about) are a decade old. To a large extent I think
it's an opportunity you've already grasped - webshop,
excellent online documentation, free software downloads
for smaller customers, good appnotes.... and, dare I say,
informal access to top-notch factory expertise via public
media such as this group.
>Sure, we could say "well, that is life" but who would we be serving?
Nah. You wouldn't do that. You need to eat too :-)
Like I said: it seems to me that major FPGA vendors have somewhat
taken that opportunity already. Almost without exception, they
(or at least their FPGA business) started small, with reasonably
close relations between factory and even the smaller customers.
As they've grown they seem to have remembered that heritage,
and the quality of technical information available through
FPGA vendors' websites and other resources is pretty good.
(Yes, I know people complain all the time. And you put a
brave face on it, because you know that there's at least a
grain of truth in most complaints, and you want happy customers
and happy potential customers. We appreciate it. Really.)
I see the result of all this being a sidelining of the traditional
distributor role as intermediary between factory and customer.
Instead, the successful distributors either act as supermarkets
(in which case let us treat them as such, and punish with our
lack of custom those who can't keep their shelves full of
attractive products at attractive prices) or act as agencies
helping large customers collaborate effectively with the
factory to ensure a good deal for both parties. The
traditional component disti, who tries to erect walls between
customer and factory to protect his own revenue monopoly
at the customer's expense, is surely a dinosaur whose
meteorite is already bright in the sky. Their passing
will be mourned by but few.
--
Jonathan Bromley, Consultant
DOULOS - Developing Design Know-how
VHDL * Verilog * SystemC * e * Perl * Tcl/Tk * Project Services
Doulos Ltd., 22 Market Place, Ringwood, BH24 1AW, UK
jonathan.bromley@MYCOMPANY.com
http://www.MYCOMPANY.com
The contents of this message may contain personal views which
are not the views of Doulos Ltd., unless specifically stated.
Reply by austin●November 19, 20072007-11-19
Jonathan,
If one argues that FPGA technology needs to become more user friendly,
and easier to use, in order to make inroads into all possible
applications, your experience is merely one example of an opportunity
(for Xilinx).
Sure, we could say "well, that is life" but who would we be serving?
Or, we could strive to improve the situation and potentially walk away
with stellar growth, and excellent sales figures?
Personally, I will work towards the latter choice.
Austin
Reply by Jonathan Bromley●November 19, 20072007-11-19
On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 08:51:12 -0800,
austin <austin@xilinx.com> wrote:
>I have forwarded your post onto the people who should care.
It's encouraging, and perhaps not too surprising, to see
you responding thus. However, for small customers in
Europe, the poor performance of distis in supporting
smaller customers, both technically and in making
strategic product choices, is very old news. And it's
not just FPGAs; my bleat applies to the whole component
distribution business.
I don't buy parts from distis any more; I'm not in
manufacturing, and on the rare occasions when I need
to buy silicon I just take the one-off price hit of
going to Digikey or whatever. But in earlier lives
I was on both sides of the disti - as a small
development-oriented customer, and as a technical
FAE in a device manufacturer. In neither of these
roles did I feel well-served by the distis. They
often made noises about doing a technical sell and
needing in-house technical expertise, but their
FAEs were always paid peanuts and had to make their
living through sales-target bonuses; so, surprise
surprise, their focus was always on design-in
numbers. Anything with a timeline longer than
three months was beyond the next bonus payment
and therefore irrelevant. Anything technically
difficult could either be punted upwards to the
manufacturers' FAEs, or (more likely in the case
of small customers) simply ignored because the
customer would not cost them very much if they
merely went away. There was simply no motivation
for the disti FAEs to get real technical expertise.
They were usually spread way too thinly across
a raft of disparate products from several vendors,
so had no chance to gain real depth of knowledge
in anything.
I had hoped that with the recent consolidation of
distribution in Europe, things might have improved.
Maybe they have, but the feeling I get from this
group is not encouraging.
Maybe things are better in the US. Perhaps there
are so many design starts there that even a
modest distribution organisation can retain
useful technical expertise. I simply don't know.
It doesn't have to be like this. For example,
I know a few of the distributors for various
EDA tools here in the UK, and I perceive their
technical expertise to be pretty impressive and
their customer support responsive and helpful.
Component distribution, by contrast, seems to
be stuck in a 1970s road-warrior timewarp
despite the obvious importance to future
sales of effective support of new designs.
They're not even very good at being a stockholding
supermarket, as others have pointed out. (Sheesh,
they are there to *sell* stuff. But the typical
experience is to be told that you can't have one
unless you want a truckload and you don't mind
waiting until three weeks after the next festival
of St.Polycarp, or something; and you aren't allowed
to know what price it will be until you say how
many you want, so you are barred from making your
own intelligent decisions about what parts to use.)
Thanks for letting me get that off my chest :-)
--
Jonathan Bromley, Consultant
DOULOS - Developing Design Know-how
VHDL * Verilog * SystemC * e * Perl * Tcl/Tk * Project Services
Doulos Ltd., 22 Market Place, Ringwood, BH24 1AW, UK
jonathan.bromley@MYCOMPANY.com
http://www.MYCOMPANY.com
The contents of this message may contain personal views which
are not the views of Doulos Ltd., unless specifically stated.
Reply by austin●November 19, 20072007-11-19
Will,
I have forwarded your post onto the people who should care.
I will keep everyone up to speed on what I find out.
Austin
Reply by Joseph H Allen●November 19, 20072007-11-19
In article <4741af3c$0$507$bed64819@news.gradwell.net>,
Will Dean <will@nospam.demon.co.uk> wrote:
>"austin" <austin@xilinx.com> wrote in message
>news:fhq5o1$1721@cnn.xilinx.com...
>> Thanks for taking the time to let us know how all of the FPGA vendors fare
>> through their distributors. We don't often get that sort of feedback.
>As far as I can tell, the conventional distributors:
>1. Don't hold stock
>2. Don't break volume in any useful way, so you can't buy small quantities
>3. Can't give proper prices without going back to the mfg
>4. Can't offer hard technical advice (i.e. not in the published litterature)
>without going back to the mfg
>What are they for? Why are you still using them?
Here's one thing they do: they sell parts to large companys based on a PO.
In other words they loan money between the time of part delivery and the PO
getting paid. If you pay them late, I bet the interest rate they charge is
much better than credit-card interest rates, and I bet you can frequently
talk them out of charging interest.
So you can directly buy parts from many semiconductor manufactures using
your credit card, even from A and X (although X redirects you to a
distributer). This is my complaint: when you pay them by credit card, you
should get the best possible price plus the 2.5% credit card fee. I mean,
they get paid immediately, so they should be very happy with credit card
orders.
What the manufactures want even more: accurate projections of your future
purchases. Then they don't have to guess how many chips to make. Your
contract manufacture should be able to do a much better job of this than the
distributer.
--
/* jhallen@world.std.com AB1GO */ /* Joseph H. Allen */
int a[1817];main(z,p,q,r){for(p=80;q+p-80;p-=2*a[p])for(z=9;z--;)q=3&(r=time(0)
+r*57)/7,q=q?q-1?q-2?1-p%79?-1:0:p%79-77?1:0:p<1659?79:0:p>158?-79:0,q?!a[p+q*2
]?a[p+=a[p+=q]=q]=q:0:0;for(;q++-1817;)printf(q%79?"%c":"%c\n"," #"[!a[q-1]]);}