Intel's Bohr sees at least 10 more years of scaling
Dylan McGrath, EETimes
9/13/2012 12:53 AM EDT
SAN FRANCISCO—Despite the naysayers continually predicting an end to Moore's Law,Intel Senior Fellow Mark Bohr doesn't envision an end to semiconductor CMOS scaling for at least a decade.
Some believe that the end of the vaunted Moore's Law and CMOS scaling as we know it is near. Challenges to continued scaling include mounting technical hurdles and rising manufacturing costs.
But at the Intel Developer Forum here Wednesday (Sept. 12), Bohr, Intel's process technology guru, made it clear he seems a clear path to continued scaling into the 2020s.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- Multi-channel Ultra Ethernet TSS Transform Engine
- Configurable CPU tailored precisely to your needs
- Ultra high-performance low-power ADC
- HiFi iQ DSP
- CXL 4 Verification IP
Related News
- Moore Microprocessor Portfolio (MMP) Inventor Files Lawsuit against TPL Group
- Moore's Law could enter the fourth dimension--via the third
- Moore's Law threatened by lithography woes
- Broadcom: Time to prepare for the end of Moore's Law
Latest News
- ASICLAND Partners with Daegu Metropolitan City to Advance Demonstration and Commercialization of Korean AI Semiconductors
- SEALSQ and Lattice Collaborate to Deliver Unified TPM-FPGA Architecture for Post-Quantum Security
- SEMIFIVE Partners with Niobium to Develop FHE Accelerator, Driving U.S. Market Expansion
- TASKING Delivers Advanced Worst-Case Timing Coupling Analysis and Mitigation for Multicore Designs
- Efficient Computer Raises $60 Million to Advance Energy-Efficient General-Purpose Processors for AI