Physics World Focus on Computing 2018
Sixty years ago, Gordon Moore and Robert Noyce founded a start-up with the goal of further commercializing silicon-based integrated circuits – a company that within a few weeks changed its name to Intel. As we commemorate the founding of Intel, it is also worth reflecting on Gordon Moore’s other great legacy: Moore’s law, which predicts that the number of transistors on a silicon chip will double approximately every 18 months. Unlike true physical laws, however, Moore’s law is not immutable. At some point either the size of transistors will hit physical limits or it will simply become uneconomical to manufacture faster silicon chips. The interesting question is what will happen next, and this Physics World Focus hints at a couple of possible future directions.
Expand to full screen, bookmark pages or download to read offline using the icons beneath the screen. You can access the videos and audio clips if you read the emagazine online. Read it now
Or you can read selected content from the Physics World Focus on Computing 2018 here
Neural networks, explained
Big data, small lab
Quantum computing in the cloud
Simulating fluid dynamics in the cloud
Want even more from Physics World?
Get more from Physics World without waiting for the next issue. The same great journalism, but delivered to you daily. Read updates on the latest research as soon as they happen and access 20 years of online content, organized across 13 dedicated scientific areas. Visit the homepage to start exploring.