Hard copy

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In computer graphics and telecommunications, a hard copy is a permanent reproduction, on any media suitable for direct use by a person (in particular paper), of displayed or transmitted data.

Examples of hard copy include teleprinter pages, continuous printed tapes, facsimile pages, computer printouts, and radiophoto prints.

Magnetic tapes, diskettes, and nonprinted punched paper tapes are not hard copy.

In semiconductor electronics, an ASIC hard copy can be made of an FPGA.[citation needed]

HardCopy normally refers to the Altera technique of producing a structured cell ASIC where the cells are the same design as the FPGA, but the programmable routing is replaced with fixed wire interconnect. These devices then do not need and cannot be re-programming as an FPGA.[1]

EasyPath normally refers to the Xilinx technique of producing a customer specific FPGA that is 30% - 70% less expensive than a standard FPGA and where the cells are the same as the FPGA, but the programmable capability is removed.[2]

This article contains material from the Federal Standard 1037C (in support of MIL-STD-188), which, as a work of the United States Government, is in the public domain.

http://www.xilinx.com/products/silicon_solutions/fpgas/easypath/index.htm

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