EEVblog Electronics Community Forum
General => General Technical Chat => Topic started by: Richard Crowley on January 03, 2019, 11:32:13 pm
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Dr. Moore was born on 03-Jan-1929. After leaving Shockley Labs with the "traitorous eight" and forming Fairchild Semiconductor, he and Robert Noyce left Fairchild and founded NM Electronics. (Later named "Intel").
In the 35th anniversary edition of Electronics magazine (19-Apr-1965) he was asked to write an article that was named "Cramming more components onto integrated circuits" It contained what is now called "Moore's Law"
Cramming more components onto integrated circuits
With unit cost falling as the number of components per circuit rises, by 1975 economics may dictate squeezing as many as 65,000 components on a single silicon chip
By Gordon E. Moore
Director, Research and Development Laboratories, Fairchild Semiconductor division of Fairchild Camera and Instrument Corp.
http://www.monolithic3d.com/uploads/6/0/5/5/6055488/gordon_moore_1965_article.pdf (http://www.monolithic3d.com/uploads/6/0/5/5/6055488/gordon_moore_1965_article.pdf)
Intel has published a "commemorative edition" of the long-defunct magazine "Electronics" including the article...
https://issuu.com/zenogroupcal/docs/intel_electronics_magazine_final/20 (https://issuu.com/zenogroupcal/docs/intel_electronics_magazine_final/20)
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I think that Moores Law is just about holding, although the GHz race has now slowed to a crawl. Elsewhere on Youtube I watched a video today of someone doing a server rollout. Each machine had 2 x 20 core CPUs and was filled with 64Gb RAM sticks, power that was unthinkable in April 1965.
So, thank you Gordon, and I hope that you had cake :clap: :clap: :clap:
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So, thank you Gordon, and I hope that you had cake :clap: :clap: :clap:
Going by Moore's Law since that article, his cake should have approximately pi*10^17 candles!