Digital course

Digital course

Want to learn how to design digital chips?

Learn to design your own ASIC and get it fabricated! Thanks to the open source Process Development Kit from Google and Skywater and the OpenLane ASIC tools from Efabless, we now have the opportunity to get involved in this exciting field without signing NDAs or paying a fortune for tool licenses.

GCC revolutionised compiling, Linux revolutionised computing. Android revolutionised phones. Arduino revolutionised microcontrollers. RISCV is revolutionising ISAs. The next step is open source silicon.

This course will give you the experience of designing your own microchip using free and open source tools and getting it manufactured on an open source PDK.

Of the 500 people who have taken the course, 150 have submitted designs for MPW2, MPW3, MPW4, MPW5, MPW6, MPW7, MPW8 and Tiny Tapeout.

Analog course

Analog course

Want to learn how to design analog chips?

The Zero to ASIC Analog course will guide you through the process of taping out analog integrated circuits using open-source tools. While digital design often relies on hardware description languages and automated synthesis, analog design involves more in depth simulation and drawing circuit layouts by hand. You’ll learn to use tools like Xschem for schematic capture, NGspice for simulation, and Magic for layout.

The course focuses on the Sky130 Process Design Kit, a readily available open-source PDK well-suited for mixed-signal designs. You’ll gain practical experience by drawing schematics, simulating, and ultimately taping out your own analog circuits, culminating in the fabrication of a physical chip through Tiny Tapeout.

Join the growing movement of open source analog chip designers by taking this course!

Testimonials

Having studied analog theory in college but not having the opportunity to tape out left a void in my heart. This course really was the “missing semester” for taping out analog and mixed signal designs. I highly recommend it anyone who wants to bridge this skill gap!

Argunda (analog course)
I've always looked at Magic and it was basically impenetrable to me. So I was really happy to learn how to actually use it and understand how to make an ASIC. I found found the course materials very easy to follow and the discord conversations were also very useful.

Robert Baruch (digital course)

Amazing course, lots of awesome help on the discord. I feel like there's a growing community surrounding the course which will help make everything more accessible. So don't be afraid to dive in!

Matthew Beech (digital course)

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