Question

Attempts to reverse engineer these devices might correlate an XDLRC file with the relevant bits, a technique used by the BIL tool. Likely the first open-source toolchain for development on these devices was created by Claire Wolf after she reverse engineered one of them in her Project IceStorm. Project X-Ray is an attempt to reverse engineer the 7-series of these devices, including the Artix-7. Successfully reversing one of these devices involves taking the bitstream or bitfile loaded onto it and converting it back to a netlist. The primary vendors of these devices are notoriously secretive, requiring designers to use proprietary software like Quartus Prime, ISE, or Vivado. The main suppliers of these devices are (*) Altera (10[1]-5[1])and Xilinx (“ZYE-links”). For 10 points, (10[2])name these kinds of integrated circuits often used for prototyping ASICs (“A-sicks”), since their arrays of logic blocks can be reconfigured on the fly. ■END■ (10[1])

ANSWER: FPGAs [or field-programmable gate arrays; prompt on “microchips”; prompt on “integrated circuits” or “ICs” before “ASICs”; prompt on “SoCs” or “system on a chip”; prompt on “CPLDs” or “complex programmable logic devices”]
<AW>
= Average correct buzz position
Conv. %Power %Average Buzz
100%0%123.75

Back to tossups

Buzzes

PlayerTeamOpponentBuzz PositionValue
Seth EbnerDianetics for Diabeticsscreaming into the public static void main(String[] args)11410
Jerry VinokurovEight Megabytes And Constantly Swappingplaying emacs while my parents are arguing114-5
Vishwa ShanmugamMacro EditorsWe Bought a Complexity Zoo Story11910
Corry Wanga neural-net processor; a thinking machineEdwardian Manifestation of All Colonial Sins11910
Dan Niplaying emacs while my parents are arguingEight Megabytes And Constantly Swapping14310