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Moore's law

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Moore's law  (môrz)
The observation that steady technological improvements in miniaturization leads to a doubling of the density of transistors on new integrated circuits every 18 months. In the mid-1960s, Gordon Moore (born 1929), one of the founders of Intel Corporation, observed that the density of transistors had been doubling every year, although the pace slowed slightly in the following years. The 18-month pattern held true into the 21st century, though as technology approaches the point where circuits are only a few atoms wide, new technologies, possibly not involving transistors at all, may be required for further miniaturization.


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According to a report in the Washington Post, this advancement in American military prowess is a fact that comes under Moore's law.
With real-life examples and an accessible style, they describe such phenomena as becoming Google by connecting information, connecting circuits as in Moore's Law, connecting chips as in the development of the PC, connecting processes, as in the PC software industry, connecting machines (the Ethernet), connecting networks (the Internet) connecting devices, connecting the web, connecting intelligence and connecting patterns.
But Moore's law is expected to hit a hard wall in about 10 years.
 
 
 
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