Intel CEO: Moore’s Law is slowing down to three years

According to the latest report from Tom’s Hardware reported early this morning Beijing time, Intel CEO Pat Kissinger recently stated in a speech at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology that at the current development rate, the number of transistors is close to every Doubling in three years is actually lagging behind Moore’s Law.

Intel CEO: Moore’s Law is slowing down to three years

According to the original Moore’s Law, the number of transistors that can be accommodated on an integrated circuit will double every 18 months to 2 years, that is, ” processor performance will double approximately every two years, but At the same time the price fell to half of its previous value .”

He replied, “Let me think about it, it has been thirty or forty years since we declared Moore’s Law ‘dead.’ We are no longer in the golden age of Moore’s Law, and it is indeed much more difficult now. Looking at it now, It’s closer to doubling every three years and you’re definitely seeing the pace slowing down .”

Pat Gelsinger said that despite the significant slowdown in Moore’s Law, Intel will still be able to manufacture chips with 1 trillion transistors by 2030. He believes four factors will contribute to this: new RibbonFET transistors, PowerVIA power delivery, next-generation process nodes and 3D chip stacking . For comparison, the largest current chip in a single package has about 100 billion transistors.

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