This article deals with Moore's law, which predicted about the increasing number of components that can be put on an integrated circuit. The August 19, 1965 issue of Electronics magazine published the original article on semiconductor device scaling written by Moore, who was employed as the ...
The End of Moore's Law 摩尔定律的终结
The End of Moore's Law? Discusses the economic importance of Moore's Law, which predicts that the number of electronic devices fitting into microchips will double every year, and ... Mann,C Charles - 《Technology Review》 被引量: 40发表: 2000年 The chip design game at the end of Moore...
It’s no secret that Moore’s law is breaking down. It will be great if the geniuses at Intel and AMD figure out how to keep increasing transistor densities, but it looks like circuits will start melting soon if we get much more dense. My 20 month old Sony Vaio uses 45 nm circuit...
For more than two decades we’ve heard about thedeath of Moore’s Law. It was a principle of the late Intel co-founder Gordon Moore, positing that the number of transistors in a chip would double about every two years. In 2006, Moore himself said it would end in the 2020s. MIT Prof...
Gordon Moore’s 1965 forecast that the number of components on an integrated circuit would double every year until it reached an astonishing 65,000 by 1975 is the greatest technological prediction of the last half-century. When it proved correct in 1975,
Dr. Horowitz’s research interests are quite broad and span using EE and CS analysis methods to problems in molecular biology to creating new design methodologies for analog and digital VLSI circuits. Steven Swanson is an associate professor in the Department of Computer S...
Moore’s Law Moore’s Law has propelled the semiconductor industry forward, because it proved to be lucrative to be first-to-market with a new generation of smaller, denser, more powerful chips. And thanks to scaling, the cost of Logic and Memory chips has been reduced so dramatically that...
The essence of Moore’s Law While there are a number of projections included in Moore’s Law and virtually all of them panned out to a reasonable degree, there are two projections that are the “essence” of Moore’s Law. If we do a little math, we can add some color to these proje...
doi:10.1038/s41928-018-0031-2Hassan N. KhanDepartment of Engineering and Public PolicyDavid A. HounshellDepartment of Engineering and Public PolicyErica R. H. FuchsDepartment of Engineering and Public PolicyNature electronics