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Wanted: Moore's Law for Another 40 Years

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When you fight the law, you'll usually lose... at least that's what happens when you fight Moore's Law, an industry axiom that states that the number of transistors on a chip will roughly double approximately every two years. This video, set to the tune of "I Fought the Law" originally recorded by Sonny Curtis and The Crickets, looks back at how many have long predicted the end to Moore's Law and how it continues to prevail as Intel releases its first 45nm chips based on its reinvented transistors with new Hafnium-based high-k and metal materials. Long live Moore's Law!

Channel: Science & Technology
Uploaded: November 12, 2007 at 7:29 pm
Author: channelintel

Length: 01:25
Rating: 4.33
Views: 4903

Tags: 45nm  chips  Hafnium  high-k  Intel  Law  Moore's  processors  

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Video Comments

Solubution (July 14, 2008 at 1:17 pm)
I hope a new law comes that says each year instead of each two.
Timvanhelsdingen (June 12, 2008 at 10:17 pm)
By that time they will probably have Quantum computers, and then they can start making those faster and faster...haha :PQuantum computers are still many years in the future though... they only made some tests so far, and those were Quantum computers that could only do simple math... but just image what the technology could do one day :)
Pilanus (May 25, 2008 at 7:23 am)
well the truth is that is can only get so small before the intermolecular forces work against size, and then we wont be able to shrink computer sizes anymore. but likely by that time, a May 2008 supercomputers abilities will be capable in something about the size of a grain of rice...I guess we will just have to start working on doing it some other way...
Dilekz (November 19, 2007 at 12:05 am)
Yes well, asml can now make 32 nm =) But its not a really sold IC. So see you next time in the 32nm series..

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