News

Even within just a few years, the rate of performance improvements has slowed considerably. Moore’s Law doesn’t directly talk about performance improvements — it’s simply concerned with ...
The chipmaking industry has always existed in a state of paranoid optimism. Ever since Gordon Moore’s observation that processing power would double roughly every two years was encoded by others ...
This figure is far more than the 2x every two years predicted in Moore’s Law and means, to use the words of Nvidia’s Huang, “computing inflation.” Clearly not every organisation will ...
In context: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has consistently proclaimed the demise of Moore's Law in recent years. Although his counterparts at AMD and Intel hold differing opinions, a recent presentation ...
Moore’s Law, an observation, really, was formulated in 1965 by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore, holding that the number of transistors on a chip doubles roughly every year. In 1975, he adjusted ...
For an industry that's benefits so greatly over the years by the effects of Moore's Law, it's an existential crisis. NVIDIA doesn't see the supposed end of Moore's Law as an insurmountable problem ...
Moore's Law is ... Moore's Law is dead. The late Intel co-founder predicted in 1965 that the number of transistors in an integrated circuit would double approximately every two years, leading ...
“Coordinating concept” — these are among the many words historian of science and technology Cyrus Mody used to describe Moore’s law in an article in 2015, to commemorate 50 years of the tene ...
It’s not the Moore Foundation. It’s that phrase: Moore’s Law.” Image Mr. Moore during Intel’s early days. A few years earlier, he had predicted that the number of transistors that could ...
His prediction that the trend would continue became known as “Moore’s Law” and, later amended to every two years, it helped push Intel and rival chipmakers to aggressively target their ...