First impression was "COOL!", but since then my enthusiasim has 'cooled' slightly.
I can see the benifits of making FPGA programming easy, but if this is the only real benifit, then most people who actually want to program an FPGA are only going to be slighlty impressed. Where the real benifit would come is if we could QUICKLY modify FPGA code by changing the LabVIEW program, and have the FPGA 'instantly' re-configure. From what I understand, this is actually a time consuming process, right now - and thus not that useful.
There are a few more keys to making this whole idea useful.
1. Support for a wide selection of FPGA's.
2. NO significant performance hit by programming with LabVIEW vs. VHDL.
3. Somehow making a $2000+ LabVIEW license worth th
at price compared to a free internet download.
4. Make it easy to incorporate into existing standard procedures for configuration control. This means getting on-board with the strict SCM departments of many companies.
You guys may have already accounted for all these things, but thought I'd throw these thoughts out there just in case. I'd really like to see LabVIEW FPGA programming become popular and successful.