Moore's Law, China vs. Team USA
U.S. military lacks leading-edge chips
Rick Merritt, EETimes
7/27/2018 00:01 AM EDT
SAN FRANCISCO — The U.S. Department of Defense is pushing for a $2.2 billion program to fund a broad range of electronics efforts. The news came at an event here where speakers agreed that Moore’s Law is slowing but chip advances will continue thanks to a basket of alternatives to CMOS scaling.
The event was a coming-out party for the Electronics Resurgence Initiative (ERI), an evolving set of research programs valued at $1.5 billion over five years. They aim to counter two common enemies — the decline of Moore’s Law and the rise of China.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- Multi-channel, multi-rate Ethernet aggregator - 10G to 400G AX (e.g., AI)
- Multi-channel, multi-rate Ethernet aggregator - 10G to 800G DX
- 200G/400G/800G Ethernet PCS/FEC
- 50G/100G MAC/PCS/FEC
- 25G/10G/SGMII/ 1000BASE-X PCS and MAC
Related News
- Law firm urges Supreme Court to decide Rambus vs. Infineon
- UltraSoC strengthens global team with appointments in Asia and USA
- Palma Ceia SemiDesign Expands Asia Team, Names Bo Liu Senior Director of Engineering in China
- Moore Microprocessor Portfolio (MMP) Inventor Files Lawsuit against TPL Group
Latest News
- How CXL 3.1 and PCIe 6.2 are Redefining Compute Efficiency
- Secure-IC at Computex 2025: Enabling Trust in AI, Chiplets, and Quantum-Ready Systems
- Automotive Industry Charts New Course with RISC-V
- Xiphera Partners with Siemens Cre8Ventures to Strengthen Automotive Security and Support EU Chips Act Sovereignty Goals
- NY CREATES and Fraunhofer Institute Announce Joint Development Agreement to Advance Memory Devices at the 300mm Wafer Scale