Open Verification Methodology: Difference between revisions

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I liken OVM/UVM/TLM testbenches to the way HP printers become more and more retarded looking each year until nobody wants to buy their junky retarded halfworking printers anymore...then HP wises-up and throws out the dummies that are destroying their
NereusAJ (talk | contribs)
m Reverted 1 edit by Urgedclub9r (talk) identified as vandalism to last revision by 93.135.91.113. (TW)
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OVM testbenches are written by unqualified verification pinheads, overdosing, foaming at the mouth, high from breathing their own exhaust fumes too much...devoid of common sense, logic, or reasoning... throwing trash everywhere in their path, disorganizing, making reusable lies over and over...like the ink cartage that cost more than the printer...
 
I liken OVM/UVM/TLM testbenches to the way HP printers become more and more retarded looking each year until nobody wants to buy their junky retarded halfworking printers anymore...then HP wises-up and throws out the dummies that are destroying their products with retarded bloated angular designs amd dumbass web services that nobody wants...then, the cycle starts all over again by making square printers that print well... Eventually they firing the good people again and replacing them with dummies... Then you have the next OVM moment...
 
==OVM Bolongie==
The '''Open Verification Methodology''' (OVM) is a documented [[methodology]] with a supporting building-block library for the verification of semiconductor chip designs. The initial version, OVM 1.0, was released in January, 2008<ref>[http://www.ovmworld.org/press_release_010908.php OVM 1.0 Announcement]</ref>, and regular updates have expanded its functionality. The latest version is OVM 2.1.2, released in January, 2011. The current release and all previous releases are available, under the [[Apache License]], on the OVM World<ref>[http://www.ovmworld.org OVM World]</ref> site.