CEOs Diverge on Moore's Law
Architecture is the new driver, say Arm, Micron, Xilinx
By Rick Merritt, EETimes
July 19, 2019
SAN JOSE, Calif. — Chief executives of Arm, Micron, and Xilinx gave diverging views on the outlook for Moore’s Law but shared enthusiasm for the future of semiconductors in a panel hosted by the Churchill Club here.
Moore’s Law has run out of gas, “and that is profound,” said Victor Peng, CEO of Xilinx, pointing to the rising costs of increasing performance and reducing power and area of chips.
“You can get one of the three, it’s hard to get two of three, and I would challenge anyone who says they can get three of the three,” he said. Today’s extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography systems only remove the complexity of multi-patterning today’s chips, the 7-5-3-nm names of the latest nodes “are all marketing numbers, and no one has fixed the interconnect problem.”
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- SHA-256 Secure Hash Algorithm IP Core
- EdDSA Curve25519 signature generation engine
- DeWarp IP
- 6-bit, 12 GSPS Flash ADC - GlobalFoundries 22nm
- LunaNet AFS LDPC Encoder and Decoder IP Core
Related News
- Lip-Bu Tan on AI, China & Moore
- Pragmatic Semiconductor Announces Appointment of Semiconductor Industry Veteran, David Moore, as CEO
- Controversial former Arm China CEO founds RISC-V chip startup
- Micron Technology, Inc., Files RICO Lawsuit Against Rambus
Latest News
- Rebellions Collaborates with SK Telecom and Arm Targeting Sovereign AI and Telecom Infrastructure
- Sarcina Launches UCIe-A/S Packaging IP to Accelerate Chiplet Architectures
- BrainChip Unveils Radar Reference Platform to Bridge the ‘Identification Gap’ in Edge AI
- Siemens accelerates AI chip verification to trillion‑cycle scale with NVIDIA technology
- SiFive Raises $400 Million to Accelerate High-Performance RISC-V Data Center Solutions; Company Valuation Now Stands at $3.65 Billion