Moore's Law - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia PDF
Moore's Law - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia PDF
Moore's Law - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia PDF
Moore's law
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Moore's law is the observation that, over the history of computing hardware, the number of transistors on integrated circuits doubles approximately every two years. The law is named after Intel co-founder Gordon E. Moore, who described the trend in his 1965 paper.[1][2][3] His prediction has proven to be accurate, in part because the law is now used in the semiconductor industry to guide long-term planning and to set targets for research and development.[4] The capabilities of many digital electronic devices are strongly linked to Moore's law: processing speed, memory capacity, sensors and even the number and size of pixels in digital cameras.[5] All of these are improving at (roughly) exponential rates as well (see Other Plot of CPU transistor counts against dates of introduction. formulations and similar laws). This exponential Note the logarithmic vertical scale; the line corresponds to improvement has dramatically enhanced the exponential growth with transistor count doubling every two impact of digital electronics in nearly every years. segment of the world economy.[6] Moore's law describes a driving force of technological and social change in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.[7][8] The period often quoted as "18 months" is due to Intel executive David House, who predicted that period for a doubling in chip performance (being a combination of the effect of more transistors and their being faster).[9] Although this trend has continued for more than half a century, Moore's law should be considered an observation or conjecture and not a physical or natural law. Sources in 2005 expected it to continue until at least 2015 or 2020.[note 1][11] However, the 2010 update to the International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors has growth slowing at the end of 2013,[12] after which time transistor counts and densities are to double only every three years.
An Osborne Executive portable computer, from 1982 with a Zilog Z80 4MHz CPU, and a 2007 Apple iPhone with a 412MHz ARM11 CPU. The Executive weighs 100 times as much, is nearly 500 times as large by volume, costs approximately 10 times as much (inflation adjusted), and has 1/100th the clock frequency of the smartphone.
Contents
1 History 2 Other formulations and similar laws 3 As a target for industry and a self-fulfilling prophecy 3.1 Moore's second law 4 Major enabling factors and future trends
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4.1 Ultimate limits of the law 4.2 Futurists and Moore's law 5 Consequences and limitations 5.1 The ensuing speed of technological change 5.2 Transistor count versus computing performance 5.3 Importance of non-CPU bottlenecks 5.4 Parallelism and Moore's law 5.5 Continuing Moore's law in the beyond-CMOS era 5.6 Obsolescence 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External links 10.1 News 10.2 Articles 10.3 Data 10.4 FAQs
History
The term "Moore's law" was coined around 1970 by the Caltech professor, VLSI pioneer, and entrepreneur Carver Mead in reference to a statement by Gordon E. Moore.[2][13] Predictions of similar increases in computer power had existed years prior. Alan Turing in his 1950 paper Computing Machinery and Intelligence had predicted that by the turn of the millennium, we would have computers with a storage capacity of about 109 bits.[14] Moore may have heard Douglas Engelbart, a co-inventor of today's mechanical computer mouse, discuss the projected downscaling of integrated circuit size in a 1960 lecture.[15] A New York Times article published August 31, 2009, credits Engelbart as having made the prediction in 1959.[16]
Moore's original statement that transistor counts had doubled every year can be found in his publication "Cramming more components onto integrated circuits", Electronics Magazine 19 April 1965. The paper noted that the number of components in integrated circuits had doubled every year from the invention of the integrated circuit in 1958 until 1965[17] and then concluded: The complexity for minimum component costs has increased at a rate of roughly a factor of two per year. Certainly over the short term this rate can be expected to continue, if not to increase. Over the longer term, the rate of increase is a bit more uncertain, although there is no reason to believe it will not remain nearly constant for at least 10 years. That means by 1975, the number of components per integrated circuit for minimum cost will be 65,000. I believe that such a large circuit can be built on a single wafer.[1] Moore slightly altered the formulation of the law over time, in retrospect bolstering the perceived accuracy of his law.[18] Most notably, in 1975, Moore altered his projection to a doubling every two years.[19][20] Despite popular misconception, he is adamant that he did not predict a doubling "every 18 months." However, David
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House, an Intel colleague, had factored in the increasing performance of transistors to conclude that integrated circuits would double in performance every 18 months.[note 2] In April 2005, Intel offered US$10,000 to purchase a copy of the original Electronics Magazine issue in which Moore's article appeared.[22] An engineer living in the United Kingdom was the first to find a copy and offer it to Intel.[23]
Density at minimum cost per transistor. This is the formulation given in Moore's 1965 paper.[1] It is not just about the density of transistors that can be achieved, but about the density of transistors at which the cost per transistor is the lowest.[24] As more transistors are put on a chip, the cost to make each transistor decreases, but the chance that the chip will not work due to a defect increases. In 1965, Moore examined the density of transistors at which cost is minimized, and observed that, as transistors were made smaller through advances in photolithography, this number would increase at "a rate of roughly a factor of two per year".[1] Current state-of-the-art photolithography tools use deep ultraviolet (DUV) light from excimer lasers with wavelengths of 248 and 193 nm the dominant lithography technology today is thus also called "excimer laser lithography"[25][26] which has enabled minimum feature sizes in chip manufacturing to shrink from 500 nanometers in 1990 to 45 nanometers and below in 2010. This trend is expected to continue into this decade for even denser chips, with minimum features approaching 10 nanometers. Excimer laser lithography has thus played a critical role in the continued advance of Moore's law for the last 20 years.[27] Hard disk storage cost per unit of information. A similar law (sometimes called Kryder's Law) has held for hard disk storage cost per unit of information.[28] The rate of progression in disk storage over the past decades has actually sped up more than once, corresponding to the utilization of error correcting codes, the magnetoresistive effect and the giant magnetoresistive effect. The current rate of increase in hard drive capacity is roughly similar to the rate of increase in transistor count. Recent trends show that this rate has been maintained into 2007.[29] Network capacity. According to Gerry/Gerald Butters,[30][31] the former head of Lucent's Optical Networking Group at Bell Labs, there is another version, called Butters' Law of Photonics,[32] a formulation which deliberately parallels Moore's law. Butter's law[33] says that the amount of data coming out of an optical fiber is doubling every nine months. Thus, the cost of transmitting a bit over an optical network decreases by half every
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PC hard disk capacity (in GB). The plot is logarithmic, so the fitted line corresponds to exponential growth.
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nine months. The availability of wavelength-division multiplexing (sometimes called "WDM") increased the capacity that could be placed on a single fiber by as much as a factor of 100. Optical networking and dense wavelength-division multiplexing (DWDM) is rapidly bringing down the cost of networking, and further progress seems assured. As a result, the wholesale price of data traffic collapsed in the dot-com bubble. Nielsen's Law says that the bandwidth available to users increases by 50% annually.[34] Pixels per dollar. Similarly, Barry Hendy of Kodak Australia has plotted the "pixels per dollar" as a basic measure of value for a digital camera, demonstrating the historical linearity (on a log scale) of this market and the opportunity to predict the future trend of digital camera price, LCD and LED screens and resolution. The great Moore's law compensator (TGMLC), generally referred to as bloat, and also known as Wirth's law, is the principle that successive generations of computer software acquire enough bloat to offset the performance gains predicted by Moore's law. In a 2008 article in InfoWorld, Randall C. Kennedy,[35] Pixels per dollar based on Australian recommended retail formerly of Intel, introduces this term using price of Kodak digital cameras successive versions of Microsoft Office between the year 2000 and 2007 as his premise. Despite the gains in computational performance during this time period according to Moore's law, Office 2007 performed the same task at half the speed on a prototypical year 2007 computer as compared to Office 2000 on a year 2000 computer. Library expansion was calculated in 1945 by Fremont Rider to double in capacity every 16 years, if sufficient space were made available.[36] He advocated replacing bulky, decaying printed works with miniaturized microform analog photographs, which could be duplicated on-demand for library patrons or other institutions. He did not foresee the digital technology that would follow decades later to replace analog microform with digital imaging, storage, and transmission mediums. Automated, potentially lossless digital technologies allowed vast increases in the rapidity of information growth in an era that is now sometimes called an "Information Age". The Carlson Curve is a term coined by The Economist [37] to describe the biotechnological equivalent of Moore's law, and is named after author Rob Carlson.[38] Carlson accurately predicted that the doubling time of DNA sequencing technologies (measured by cost and performance) would be at least as fast as Moore's law.[39] Carlson Curves illustrate the rapid (in some cases hyperexponential) decreases in cost, and increases in performance, of a variety of technologies, including DNA sequencing, DNA synthesis and a range of physical and computational tools used in protein expression and in determining protein structures.
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Some of the new directions in research that may allow Moore's law to continue are: Researchers from IBM and Georgia Tech created a new speed record when they ran a silicon/germanium helium supercooled transistor at 500 gigahertz (GHz).[54] The transistor operated above 500 GHz at 4.5 K (451 F/268.65 C)[55] and simulations showed that it could likely run at 1 THz (1,000 GHz). However, this trial only tested a single transistor. Using deep-ultraviolet excimer laser photolithography,[25][26] in continuing the advances in semiconductor chip fabrication,[27] IBM researchers announced in early 2006 that they had developed a technique to print circuitry only 29.9 nm wide using 193 nm ArF excimer laser lithography. IBM claims that this technique may allow chip makers to use then-current methods for seven more years while continuing to achieve results forecast by Moore's law. New methods that can achieve smaller circuits are expected to be substantially more expensive. In April 2008, researchers at HP Labs announced the creation of a working memristor: a fourth basic passive circuit element whose existence had previously only been theorized. The memristor's unique properties allow for the creation of smaller and better-performing electronic devices.[56] In February 2010, Researchers at the Tyndall National Institute in Cork, Ireland announced a breakthrough in transistors with the design and fabrication of the world's first junctionless transistor. The research led by Professor Jean-Pierre Colinge was published in Nature Nanotechnology and describes a control gate around a silicon nanowire that can tighten around the wire to the point of closing down the passage of electrons without the use of junctions or doping. The researchers claim that the new junctionless transistors can be produced at 10-nanometer scale using existing fabrication techniques.[57] In April 2011, a research team at the University of Pittsburgh announced the development of a singleelectron transistor 1.5 nanometers in diameter made out of oxide based materials. According to the researchers, three "wires" converge on a central "island" which can house one or two electrons. Electrons tunnel from one wire to another through the island. Conditions on the third wire results in distinct conductive properties including the ability of the transistor to act as a solid state memory.[58] In February 2012, a research team at the University of New South Wales announced the development of the first working transistor consisting of a single atom placed precisely in a silicon crystal (not just picked from a large sample of random transistors).[59] Moore's law predicted this milestone to be reached in the lab by 2020. The advancement of nanotechnology, could spur the creation of microscopic computers and restore Moore's Law to its original rate of growth.[60][61][62]
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In January 1995, the Digital Alpha 21164 microprocessor had 9.3 million transistors. This 64-bit processor was a technological spearhead at the time, even if the circuit's market share remained average. Six years later, a state of the art microprocessor contained more than 40 million transistors. It is theorised that with further miniaturisation, by 2015 these processors should contain more than 15 billion transistors, and by 2020 will be in molecular scale production, where each molecule can be individually positioned.[64] In 2003, Intel predicted the end would come between 2013 and 2018 with 16 nanometer manufacturing processes and 5 nanometer gates, due to quantum tunnelling, although others suggested chips could just get bigger, or become layered.[65] In 2008 it was noted that for the last 30 years it has been predicted that Moore's law would last at least another decade.[53] Some see the limits of the law as being far in the distant future. Lawrence Krauss and Glenn D. Starkman announced an ultimate limit of around 600 years in their paper,[66] based on rigorous estimation of total informationprocessing capacity of any system in the Universe, which is limited by the Bekenstein bound. One could also limit the theoretical performance of a rather practical "ultimate laptop" with a mass of one kilogram and a volume of one litre. This is done by considering the speed of light, the quantum scale, the gravitational constant and the Boltzmann constant, giving a performance of 5.4258*10^50 logical operations per second on approximately 10^31 bits.[67]
The trend of scaling for NAND flash memory allows doubling of components manufactured in the same wafer area in less than 18 months.
Then again, the law has often met obstacles that first appeared insurmountable but were indeed surmounted before Atomistic simulation result for formation of inversion channel (electron density) and long. In that sense, attainment of threshold voltage (IV) in a nanowire MOSFET. Note that the threshold Moore says he now voltage for this device lies around 0.45 V. Nanowire MOSFETs lie towards the end of sees his law as more the ITRS roadmap for scaling devices below 10 nm gate lengths. [52] beautiful than he had realized: "Moore's law is a violation of Murphy's law. Everything gets better and better."[68]
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Futurists such as Ray Kurzweil, Bruce Sterling, and Vernor Vinge believe that the exponential improvement described by Moore's law will ultimately lead to a technological singularity: a period where progress in technology occurs almost instantly.[69] Although Kurzweil agrees that by 2019 the current strategy of ever-finer photolithography will have run its course, he speculates that this does not mean the end of Moore's law: Moore's law of Integrated Circuits was not the first, but the fifth paradigm to forecast accelerating price-performance ratios. Computing devices have been consistently multiplying in power (per unit of time) from the mechanical calculating devices used in the 1890 U.S. Census, to [Newman's] relay-based "[Heath] Robinson" machine that cracked the Lorenz cipher, to the CBS vacuum tube computer that predicted the election of Eisenhower, to the transistor-based machines used in the first space launches, to the integrated-circuit-based personal computer.[70]
Kurzweil's extension of Moore's law from integrated circuits to earlier transistors, vacuum tubes, relays and electromechanical computers.
Kurzweil speculates that it is likely that some new type of technology (e.g. optical, quantum computers, DNA computing) will replace current integrated-circuit technology, and that Moore's Law will hold true long after 2020.[70] Seth Lloyd shows how the potential computing capacity of a kilogram of matter equals pi times energy divided by Planck's constant. Since the energy is such a large number and Planck's constant is so small, this equation generates an extremely large number: about 5.0 * 1050 operations per second.[69] He believes that the exponential growth of Moore's law will continue beyond the use of integrated circuits into technologies that will lead to the technological singularity. The Law of Accelerating Returns described by Ray Kurzweil has in many ways altered the public's perception of Moore's law. It is a common (but mistaken) belief that Moore's law makes predictions regarding all forms of technology, when it was If the current trend continues to originally intended to apply only to semiconductor circuits. Many futurists 2020, the number of transistors still use the term "Moore's law" in this broader sense to describe ideas would reach 32 billion. like those put forth by Kurzweil. Kurzweil has hypothesised that Moore's law will apply at least by inference to any problem that can be attacked by digital computers as is in its essence also a digital problem. Therefore, because of the digital coding of DNA, progress in genetics may also advance at a Moore's law rate. Moore himself, who never intended his law to be interpreted so broadly, has quipped: Moore's law has been the name given to everything that changes exponentially. I say, if Gore invented the Internet,[note 3] I invented the exponential.[72] Michael S. Malone wrote of a Moore's War in the apparent success of Shock and awe in the early days of the Iraq War.[73] Michio Kaku, an American scientist and physicist, predicted in 2003 that "Moore's law will probably collapse in 20 years".[74]
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Parallel computation has recently become necessary to take full advantage of the gains allowed by Moore's law. For years, processor makers consistently delivered increases in clock rates and instruction-level parallelism, so that single-threaded code executed faster on newer processors with no modification.[80] Now, to manage CPU power dissipation, processor makers favor multi-core chip designs, and software has to be written in a multithreaded or multi-process manner to take full advantage of the hardware. Many multi-threaded development paradigms introduce overhead, and will not see a linear increase in speed vs number of processors. This is particularly true while accessing shared or dependent resources, due to lock contention. This effect becomes more noticeable as the number of processors increases. Recently, IBM has been exploring ways to distribute computing power more efficiently by mimicking the distributional properties of the human brain.[81] In addition to adding more general purpose 'cores' to their chips, processor manufactures are also taking advantage of the 'extra space' that the transistor shrinkage provides to add specialized processing units to deal with features such as graphics, video and cryptography. For one example, Intel's Parallel JavaScript extension not only adds support for multiple cores, but also for the other non-general processing features of their chips, as part of the migration in client side scripting towards HTML5.[82]
Obsolescence
A negative implication of Moore's law is obsolescence, that is, as technologies continue to rapidly "improve", these improvements can be significant enough to rapidly render predecessor technologies obsolete. In situations in which security and survivability of hardware and/or data are paramount, or in which resources are limited, rapid obsolescence can pose obstacles to smooth or continued operations.[86] Because of the toxic materials used in the production of modern computers, obsolescence if not properly managed can lead to harmful environmental impacts.[87]
See also
Accelerating change Amdahl's law Bekenstein bound Bell's law Metcalfe's law Empirical relationship Experience curve effects Exponential growth Grosch's law Haitz's law analog to Moore's law for LEDs History of computing hardware (1960spresent) Hofstadter's law
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Hofstadter's law Kryder's law Klaiber's law Koomey's law List of eponymous laws Logistic growth May's Law Microprocessor chronology Nielsen's law Quantum computing Rock's law Second half of the chessboard Semiconductor Wirth's law Intel Tick-Tock
Notes
1. ^ a b The trend begins with the invention of the integrated circuit in 1958. See the graph on the bottom of page 3 of Moore's original presentation of the idea. [10] 2. ^ Although originally calculated as a doubling every year, [10] Moore later refined the period to two years. [21] In this second source Moore also suggests that the version that is often quoted as "18 months" is due to David House, an Intel executive, who predicted that period for a doubling in chip performance (being a combination of the effect of more transistors and them being faster). [9] 3. ^ Moore here is referring humorously to a widespread assertion that then-Vice President Al Gore once claimed to have invented the internet. This was, however, based on a misunderstanding. [71]
References
1. ^ a b c d Moore, Gordon E. (1965). "Cramming more components onto integrated circuits" (http://www.cs.utexas.edu/~fussell/courses/cs352h/papers/moore.pdf) (PDF). Electronics Magazine. p. 4. Retrieved 2006-11-11. 2. ^ a b "Excerpts from A Conversation with Gordon Moore: Moores Law" (http://large.stanford.edu/courses/2012/ph250/lee1/docs/Excepts_A_Conversation_with_Gordon_Moore.pdf) (PDF). Intel Corporation. 2005. p. 1. Retrieved 2013-09-12. 3. ^ "1965 "Moore's Law" Predicts the Future of Integrated Circuits" (http://www.computerhistory.org/semiconductor/timeline/1965-Moore.html). Computer History Museum. 2007. Retrieved 2009-03-19. 4. ^ a b Disco, Cornelius; van der Meulen, Barend (1998). Getting new technologies together (http://books.google.com/books?id=1khslZjbgEC&pg=PA206&lpg=PA206&ots=D38v82mSkm&output=html&sig=ACfU3U2jPixZgKqPYwVPHDpwO2Zt31puQ). New York: Walter de Gruyter. pp. 206207. ISBN 3-11-015630-X. OCLC 39391108 (//www.worldcat.org/oclc/39391108). Retrieved 23 August 2008. 5. ^ Nathan Myhrvold (7 June 2006). "Moore's Law Corollary: Pixel Power" (http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/07/technology/circuits/07essay.html). New York Times. Retrieved 2011-1127. 6. ^ Rauch, Jonathan (January 2001). "The New Old Economy: Oil, Computers, and the Reinvention of the Earth" (http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/2001/01/rauch.htm). The Atlantic Monthly. Retrieved 28 November 2008. 7. ^ Keyes, Robert W. (September 2006). "The Impact of Moore's Law" (http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freeabs_all.jsp?arnumber=4785857). Solid State Circuits Newsletter. Retrieved 28 November 2008. 8. ^ Liddle, David E. (September 2006). "The Wider Impact of Moore's Law"
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8. ^ Liddle, David E. (September 2006). "The Wider Impact of Moore's Law" (http://www.ieee.org/portal/site/sscs/menuitem.f07ee9e3b2a01d06bb9305765bac26c8/index.jsp? &pName=sscs_level1_article&TheCat=2165&path=sscs/06Sept&file=Liddle.xml). Solid State Circuits Newsletter. Retrieved 28 November 2008. 9. ^ a b "Moore's Law to roll on for another decade" (http://news.cnet.com/2100-1001-984051.html). Retrieved 2011-11-27. "Moore also affirmed he never said transistor count would double every 18 months, as is commonly said. Initially, he said transistors on a chip would double every year. He then recalibrated it to every two years in 1975. David House, an Intel executive at the time, noted that the changes would cause computer performance to double every 18 months." 10. ^ a b Gordon E. Moore (1965-04-19). "Cramming more components onto integrated circuits" (ftp://download.intel.com/museum/Moores_Law/Articles-Press_Releases/Gordon_Moore_1965_Article.pdf). Electronics. Retrieved 2011-08-22. 11. ^ Kanellos, Michael (19 April 2005). "New Life for Moore's Law" (http://news.cnet.com/New-life-for-MooresLaw/2009-1006_3-5672485.html). cnet. Retrieved 2009-03-19. 12. ^ "Overall Technology Roadmap Characteristics" (http://www.itrs.net/Links/2010ITRS/2010Update/ToPost/2010Tables_ORTC_ITRS.xls). International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors. 2010. Retrieved 2013-08-08. 13. ^ "Moore's Law The Genius Lives On" (http://web.archive.org/web/20070713083830/http://www.ieee.org/portal/site/sscs/menuitem.f07ee9e3b2a01d0 6bb9305765bac26c8/index.jsp? &pName=sscs_level1_article&TheCat=2165&path=sscs/06Sept&file=Gelsinger.xml). IEEE solid-state circuits society newsletter. September 2006. Archived from the original (http://www.ieee.org/sscs-news) on 2007-0713. 14. ^ "Computing Machinery and Intelligence" (http://loebner.net/Prizef/TuringArticle.html). Mind. 1950. 15. ^ Markoff, John (18 April 2005). "It's Moore's Law But Another Had The Idea First" (http://www.webcitation.org/62Ai5rX4b). The New York Times. Archived from the original (http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/18/technology/18moore.html) on 4 October 2011. Retrieved 4 October 2011. 16. ^ Markoff, John (31 August 2009). "After the Transistor, a Leap Into the Microcosm" (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/01/science/01trans.html?ref=science). The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-08-31. 17. ^ Moore 1965, p. 5. 18. ^ Ethan Mollick (2006). "Establishing Moore's Law" (http://www2.computer.org/portal/web/csdl/doi/10.1109/MAHC.2006.45). IEEE Annals of the History of Computing. Retrieved 2008-10-18. 19. ^ Moore, G.E. (1975). "Progress in digital integrated electronics" (http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp? arnumber=1478174). IEEE. Retrieved 2011-11-27. 20. ^ "Excerpts from A Conversation with Gordon Moore: Moores Law" (ftp://download.intel.com/museum/Moores_Law/VideoTranscripts/Excepts_A_Conversation_with_Gordon_Moore.pdf). Intel. Retrieved 2011-08-22. 21. ^ "Excerpts from A Conversation with Gordon Moore: Moores Law" (ftp://download.intel.com/museum/Moores_Law/VideoTranscripts/Excepts_A_Conversation_with_Gordon_Moore.pdf). Intel. Retrieved 2011-08-22. 22. ^ Michael Kanellos (2005-04-11). "Intel offers $10,000 for Moore's Law magazine" (http://www.zdnet.com/news/intel-offers-10000-for-moores-law-magazine/142261). ZDNET News.com. Retrieved 2013-06-21. 23. ^ "Moore's Law original issue found" (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/4472549.stm). BBC News Online. 2005-04-22. Retrieved 2012-08-26. 24. ^ Stokes, Jon (2008-09-27). "Understanding Moore's Law" (http://arstechnica.com/hardware/news/2008/09/moore.ars). ars technica. Retrieved 2011-08-22. 25. ^ a b c Jain, K. et al, "Ultrafast deep-UV lithography with excimer lasers", IEEE Electron Device Lett., Vol. EDL-3, 53 (1982); http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freeabs_all.jsp?arnumber=1482581 26. ^ a b c Jain, K. "Excimer Laser Lithography", SPIE Press, Bellingham, WA, 1990. 27. ^ a b c La Fontaine, B., "Lasers and Moore's Law", SPIE Professional, Oct. 2010, p. 20; http://spie.org/x42152.xml 28. ^ Walter, Chip (2005-07-25). "Kryder's Law" (http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=kryderslaw&ref=sciam). Scientific American ((Verlagsgruppe Georg von Holtzbrinck GmbH)). Retrieved 2006-10-29.
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29. 30.
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Further reading
Understanding Moore's Law: Four Decades of Innovation. Edited by David C. Brock. Philadelphia: Chemical Heritage Press, 2006. ISBN 0-941901-41-6. OCLC 66463488 (http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/66463488).
External links
News
Hewlett Packard outlines computer memory of the future (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/8609885.stm) BBC News, Thursday, 8 April 2010
Articles
Moore's Law Raising the Bar (http://download.intel.com/museum/Moores_Law/Printed_Materials/Moores_Law_Backgrounder.pdf) Intel press kit (http://www.intel.com/pressroom/kits/events/moores_law_40th/index.htm) released for Moore's Law's 40th anniversary, with a 1965 sketch (ftp://download.intel.com/pressroom/images/events/moores_law_40th/Moores_Law_Original_Graph.jpg ) by Moore The Lives and Death of Moore's Law (http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue7_11/tuomi/index.html) By Ilkka Tuomi; a detailed study on Moore's Law and its historical evolution and its criticism
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(http://www.kurzweilai.net/meme/frame.html?main=/articles/art0593.html) by Kurzweil. Moore says nanoelectronics face tough challenges (http://archive.is/20130102075447/http://news.com.com/2100-1006_3-5607422.html) By Michael Kanellos, CNET News.com, 9 March 2005 It's Moore's Law, But Another Had The Idea First (http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/18/technology/18moore.html) by John Markoff Gordon Moore reflects on his eponymous law (http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=gordon-e-moore--part-2&page=1) Interview with W. Wayt Gibbs in Scientific American Law that has driven digital life: The Impact of Moore's Law (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4449711.stm) A comprehensive BBC News article, 18 April 2005 IBM Research Demonstrates Path for Extending Current Chip-Making Technique (http://www03.ibm.com/press/us/en/pressrelease/19260.wss) Press release from IBM on new technique for creating line patterns, 20 February 2006 Understanding Moore's Law By Jon Hannibal Stokes (http://arstechnica.com/hardware/news/2008/09/moore.ars) 20 February 2003 The Technical Impact of Moore's Law (http://www.ieee.org/portal/site/sscs/menuitem.f07ee9e3b2a01d06bb9305765bac26c8/index.jsp? &pName=sscs_level1_article&TheCat=2165&path=sscs/06Sept&file=Keyes.xml) IEEE solid-state circuits society newsletter; September 2006 MIT Technology Review article: Novel Chip Architecture Could Extend Moore's Law (http://www.technologyreview.com/Infotech/18063/) Moore's Law seen extended in chip breakthrough (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wpdyn/content/article/2007/01/27/AR2007012700018.html) Intel Says Chips Will Run Faster, Using Less Power (http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/27/technology/27chip.html? em&ex=1170046800&en=59a4d10473c4a8c8&ei=5087%0A) No Technology has been more disruptive... (http://www.slideshare.net/Christiansandstrom/notechnology-has-been-more-disruptive-presentation/) Slide show of microchip growth Online talk Moore's Law Forever? (http://nanohub.org/resources/188/) by Dr. Lundstrom
Data
Intel (IA-32) CPU Speeds (http://wi-fizzle.com/compsci/) 19942005. Speed increases in recent years have seemed to slow down with regard to percentage increase per year (available in PDF or PNG format). Current Processors Chart (http://mysite.verizon.net/pchardwarelinks/current_cpus.htm) International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors (ITRS) (http://www.itrs.net/) Gordon Moore His Law and Integrated Circuit, Dream 2047 October 2006 (http://www.vigyanprasar.gov.in/dream/oct2006/English.pdf)
FAQs
A C|net FAQ about Moore's Law (http://archive.is/20130102082556/http://news.com.com/FAQ+Forty+years+of+Moores+Law/21001006_3-5647824.html?tag=nefd.lede) Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Moore%27s_law&oldid=579882921" Categories: Computing culture Digital media Electronic design Futurology Rules of thumb
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