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  <title><![CDATA[Georgia Tech’s Georgia Electronic Design Center Receives $40 Million in Agilent EDA Software]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p>Georgia Electronic Design
Center (GEDC) at Georgia Tech has received $40 million in EDA software, support
and training from California-based Agilent Technologies Inc. The gift was an unprecedented
in-kind gift for the facility and the School of Electrical and Computer
Engineering (ECE).</p>



<p>The multi-year commitment,
which will begin in 2010 and continue through 2012, marks the second phase of
Agilent’s work with GEDC. The company made a similar in-kind gift in 2007 of
EDA software and tools valued at $13 million.</p>



<p>The commitment reflects
Agilent’s continuing investment in the university community and the company’s
dedication to staying at the leading edge of the world of electronic design.
The selection of Georgia Tech and the GEDC team, under the leadership of Dr.
Joy Laskar, continues Agilent’s alignment with one of the world’s leading
research centers in communication technology. </p>



<p>“Access to Agilent
technology has been invaluable to GEDC research and student training” said
Laskar “As GEDC strives to maintain its place as a world leader in
communication research technology, the Agilent alliance is one of the strong
foundations of that leadership position”.</p>



<p>This new agreement further
develops the relationship between Georgia Tech and Agilent and provides an
outlet for smaller start-up companies to gain access to Agilent EDA software
and technologies through GEDC. The Agilent EDA Simulation Center currently
provides RF, microwave-system and circuit-design instruction and research for
students and start-up companies.</p>



<p>Qualified start-ups can
utilize the Agilent tools at GEDC at no cost for the first year of a company’s
launch and at a reduced rate for the following three years of incubation,
helping to alleviate the financial burden for new electronic design companies.</p>



<p>“Georgia Tech is a hotbed
of great ideas that can be turned into commercial success,” said Stephen
Fleming, vice provost of the Enterprise Innovation Institute at Georgia Tech.
“Within the area of semiconductor design, companies’ access to design systems
at low cost is essential to the development and prototyping process. Agilent’s
gift solves this problem for our companies. We are greatly indebted to them for
their most generous donation.”</p>



<p>The accessibility to
Agilent products is already driving new enterprises to Atlanta and the
resources at GEDC.</p>



<p>“When we decided to
relocate our start-up company from California to Atlanta, there were several
major reasons driving that decision,” said Jeff Galloway, co-founder of </p>

<p>Silicon Creations. “Access
to Georgia Tech, quality of life, cost of living, etc. A major benefit to us
has been the no-cost access to Agilent’s suite of design tools via their
Georgia Tech Design Simulation Design donation. We look forward to a long term
association and partnership.”</p>



<p>This second phase of the
Georgia Tech-Agilent partnership will also introduce Agilent Student Liaisons,
two graduate research assistants who will deliver software training as well as
coordinate and supervise research projects that utilize Agilent software and
tools.</p>



<p>“We are grateful for this latest
in-kind commitment from Agilent, which is the largest that ECE has ever
received and for the company’s longstanding and generous support of our
efforts,” said Gary S. May, Steve W. Chaddick School Chair of Georgia Tech’s
School of Electrical and Computer Engineering. “By using these specialized
tools on a regular basis, students will have important technical concepts enhanced
and reinforced that they learn in our electronics and electromagnetics courses
and while they are on the job in our research labs. Upon graduation, they will
immediately be valuable contributors to their employers in academia and
industry.”</p>



<p>Collaborations such as
this are vital as Georgia Tech seeks to strengthen ties with both the business
and technology community.</p>









<p>“Throughout its history, much
of the strength of Georgia Tech has come from successful partnerships with
business and industry,” said Dr. G.P. “Bud” Peterson, Georgia Tech
president.&nbsp; “Agilent has and continues to be a leader in the development
of electronic, biomedical and nano electronics.&nbsp; Strategically Agilent and
Georgia Tech, with our new Marcus Nanotechnology Research Center, our ongoing
work in the field of biomedical engineering and our growth in mixed-signal
analysis, have a great deal in common and work together well.”</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>About
Georgia Institute of Technology</p>



<p>The Georgia Institute of Technology is one of the
nation's premier research universities. Ranked seventh among&nbsp;<em>U.S. News
&amp; World Report</em>'s top public universities, Georgia Tech's more than
20,000 students are enrolled in its Colleges of Architecture, Computing,
Engineering, Liberal Arts, Management and Sciences. Tech is among the nation's
top producers of women and minority engineers. The Institute offers research
opportunities to both undergraduate and graduate students and is home to more
than 100 interdisciplinary units plus the Georgia Tech Research Institute.</p>



<p>About Georgia Electronic Design
Center</p>



<p>The
Georgia Electronic Design Center is an inter-disciplinary center at Georgia
Tech broadly focused on fostering technology at the intersection of today's
communications applications: wireless/RF, wired/copper and fiber channels. The
activities of GEDC provide the State of Georgia the opportunity to grow and
expand its technology leadership in the design of broadband (high-speed)
communications systems, devices and integrated circuits. The Center is
specifically focused on enabling the mobile internet with innovative research
on mixed-signal systems which are at the boundary between telecommunications,
microelectronics, analog/RF and sensing technologies. These efforts produce
partnerships with industry that attract new jobs to the state and support
smaller, start-up companies that create new jobs for Georgians.</p>



<p>About Agilent Technologies</p>

<p>

Agilent Technologies Inc. is the world’s
premier measurement company and a technology leader in communications,
electronics, life sciences and chemical analysis. The company’s 17,000
employees serve customers in more than 110 countries. Agilent had net revenues
of $4.5 billion in fiscal 2009. Information about Agilent is available on the
Web at <a href="http://www.agilent.com/">www.agilent.com</a>.</p>]]></body>
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      <value><![CDATA[Georgia Electronic Design Center (GEDC) at Georgia Tech has received $40 million in EDA software, support and training from California-based Agilent Technologies Inc.]]></value>
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      <value><![CDATA[Georgia Electronic Design Center (GEDC) at Georgia Tech has received $40 million in EDA software, support and training from California-based Agilent Technologies Inc. The gift was an unprecedented in-kind gift for the facility and the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE).]]></value>
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      <email><![CDATA[don.fernandez@comm.gatech.edu]]></email>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p>Don Fernandez</p><p><a href="mailto:don.fernandez@comm.gatech.edu">don.fernandez@comm.gatech.edu</a></p><p>404-894-6016</p>]]></value>
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