www.design-reuse-china.com
搜索,选择,比较,与提供商进行安全高效的联系
Design & Reuse We Chat
D&R中国官方微信公众号,
关注获取最新IP SOC业界资讯

Moore's Law Ending? No Problem

By Rob Aitken, Arm
EETimes (March 27, 2019)

An Arm fellow describes, "how I learned to stop worrying and love the end of Moore's Law."

At CES in January 2019, Nvidia’s chief executive, Jensen Huang, said what most of us in the tech business had already considered and accepted: Moore’s Law, which predicts regular increases in the computing power of silicon chips, is dead.

Today, the smallest commercially produced chips have feature sizes that are a minuscule 7 nm. As transistors get closer to atomic scale, it’s getting harder to shrink them further. Many believe that today’s most advanced transistor design, the FinFET, can’t get below 5 nm without a major rethink—and that even 5 nm may be prohibitively expensive. That means, in turn, that it’s harder to double the density of transistors on a silicon chip every 24 months, as Moore’s Law predicts.

The death of Moore’s Law has major implications, as a slowdown in performance improvements could hit some computing applications hard. Horst Simon, Deputy Director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, helps rank the 500 most powerful supercomputers in the world twice a year. He notes that while year-over-year increases remain significant—annual performance growth hovers at around 1.6x per year—there has been a marked reduction from the 1990’s and early 2000’s when annual improvements regularly exceeded 2x.

Click here to read more ...

 Back

业务合作

添加产品

供应商免费录入产品信息

点击此处了解更多关于D&R的隐私政策

© 2026 Design And Reuse

版权所有

本网站的任何部分未经Design&Reuse许可,
不得复制,重发, 转载或以其他方式使用。