SPICE (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "SPICE" in English language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank English rank
2nd place
2nd place
1st place
1st place
11th place
8th place
18th place
17th place
580th place
462nd place
3rd place
3rd place
652nd place
515th place
low place
low place
4th place
4th place
low place
low place
low place
low place
low place
low place
low place
low place
low place
low place
low place
low place
low place
8,044th place
low place
low place
low place
low place
383rd place
320th place
low place
low place
4,228th place
2,818th place
75th place
83rd place
69th place
59th place
low place
low place
1,669th place
1,290th place
7,696th place
9,995th place
low place
low place
low place
low place
102nd place
76th place
1,923rd place
1,068th place

allaboutcircuits.com

  • history-of-spice Archived October 9, 2016, at the Wayback Machine on allaboutcircuits.com. "The origin of SPICE traces back to another circuit simulation program called CANCER. Developed by professor Ronald Rohrer of U.C. Berkeley along with some of his students in the late 1960s, CANCER continued to be improved through the early 1970s. When Rohrer left Berkeley, CANCER was re-written and re-named to SPICE, released as version 1 to the public domain in May of 1972. Version 2 of SPICE was released in 1975 (version 2g6—the version used in this book—is a minor revision of this 1975 release). Instrumental in the decision to release SPICE as a public-domain computer program was professor Donald Pederson of Berkeley, who believed that all significant technical progress happens when information is freely shared. I for one thank him for his vision."

arxiv.org

berkeley.edu

eecs.berkeley.edu

  • Nagel, Laurence W.; Pederson, D. O (April 1973). SPICE (Simulation Program with Integrated Circuit Emphasis) (Technical report). University of California, Berkeley. UCB/ERL M382.
  • Nagel, Laurence W. (May 1975). SPICE2: A Computer Program to Simulate Semiconductor Circuits (Technical report). University of California, Berkeley. UCB/ERL M520.
  • CODECS: A Mixed-Level Circuit and Device Simulator, K. Mayaram, Memorandum No. UCB/ERL M88/71, Berkeley, 1988, http://www.eecs.berkeley.edu/Pubs/TechRpts/1988/ERL-88-71.pdf

coe.berkeley.edu

bwrcs.eecs.berkeley.edu

besttechviews.com

books.google.com

designers-guide.org

doi.org

f-si.org

peertube.f-si.org

fosdem.org

fraunhofer.de

iisb.fraunhofer.de

geia.org

github.com

  • "WRspice". Whiteley Research. Retrieved 2021-05-07.

handle.net

hdl.handle.net

harvard.edu

ui.adsabs.harvard.edu

ieee.org

sscs.ieee.org

ieeexplore.ieee.org

ieeeghn.org

ltwiki.org

myukk.org

nasa.gov

nescacademy.nasa.gov

nih.gov

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

nutwooduk.co.uk

omega-enterprises.net

precisionmicrodrives.com

ra3xdh.github.io

sandia.gov

xyce.sandia.gov

cs.sandia.gov

semanticscholar.org

api.semanticscholar.org

sourceforge.net

ngspice.sourceforge.net

ti.com

web.archive.org

zbmath.org