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Device Security Requires a Foundation in Hardware

A May 18th Electronic Design-hosted webinar sponsored by Rambus

Date:Wednesday, May 18, 2021
Time:11:00 AM EDT / 8:00 AM PDT
Sponsor:Rambus
Duration:30 Minutes

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Summary

From hyperscale data centers to the billions of IoT devices in homes, offices and factories, the need for security is growing rapidly. The exponential rise in data creation, and new workloads such as AI/ML with demand for low-latency, real-time operation, require rapid advancement in computing and networking. Security anchored at the chip level offers the solution to protecting increasingly valuable data while supporting the leaps in performance required by next-generation applications.

Join Neeraj Paliwal, general manager of the Rambus Security IP business, and Bill Wong, senior content director and Electronic Design editor, as they discuss how hardware level protection is the key to building the foundation of security for data and electronic systems.

Speakers


Neeraj Paliwal, General Manager Security IP, Rambus

Neeraj是说一般的人ager of the Security IP business at Rambus, based in Silicon Valley. He has 20+ years of semiconductor engineering experience in the compute and security domains. Before joining Rambus, Neeraj founded Kryptos Solutions, where he built an ultra-secure endpoint platform for high-risk government applications. Prior to that, Neeraj was the VP of Engineering at NXP Semiconductors, responsible for major OEM design-win for NXP’s NFC based secure payment platform. Neeraj also held various engineering positions at IBM and Intel working on gaming processors, and CPU products. Neeraj graduated with a Master of Technology degree in Solid State Materials from the Indian Institute of Technology in Delhi, India. He attended the Stanford Executive Program at Stanford University, California.


William Wong, Senior Content Director, Electronic Design Editor

Bill Wong has been with Electronic Design for 20 years covering a range of topics from test and measurement to embedded systems. He has a Bachelor of Electrical Engineering from Georgia Tech and a Master’s in Computer Science from Rutgers University. He has held a number of positions including a Member of the Technical Staff at RCA’s Sarnoff Research Center and Lab Director for PC Magazine.

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