Jensen Huang says Moore’s law is dead. Not quite yet
3D components and exotic new materials can keep it going for a while longer
TWO YEARS shy of its 60th birthday, Moore’s law has become a bit like Schrödinger’s hypothetical cat—at once dead and alive. In 1965 Gordon Moore, one of the co-founders of Intel, observed that the number of transistors—a type of electronic component—that could be crammed onto a microchip was doubling every 12 months, a figure he later revised to every two years.
This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “Not quite dead yet”
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