Moore’s Law states the number of transistors on an integrated circuit will double about every two years. This law, coined by Intel and Fairchild founder [Gordon Moore] has been a truism since it ...
Join us as we dive into the legacy of Moore's Law and its implications for the future with Intel's Sanjay Natarajan.
For more than two decades we’ve heard about the death of Moore’s Law. It was a principle of the late Intel co-founder Gordon ...
After all, it was a “law” proposed by Gordon E. Moore, founder of Intel. Less a law than a production goal for a silicon manufacturer, it proved to be a very useful marketing gimmick.
When does the golden rule of semiconductor scaling finally break? How small can a transistor be? And what in the world is ...
“Multicore scaling will end soon because of practical power limits. Dark silicon is becoming a major issue even more than the end of Moore’s Law. In the post-Moore era, the energy efficiency of ...
Design chips faster Another way to survive the post Moore’s Law era is to boost productivity in the SoC design stage. For SoCs in the post-Moore’s Law era, the interconnect plays a more important role ...
In recent weeks we've been hearing about some of the proposed price increases coming for TSMC's N2 process starting next year. We have been thinking through ...
The concept of Moore's Law was first introduced by Gordon Moore, co-founder of Intel, in 1965. Moore's prediction that the number of components (transistors) on a chip would double every year has been ...
For the longest time, there's been a golden rule in technology, often shorthanded as Moore's Law: Every year, transistors get smaller, and devices get faster and more capable as a result.