Re: The Spike, nanotech, and a future scenario

From: Hal Finney (hal@rain.org)
Date: Mon Oct 06 1997 - 10:14:29 MDT


I'm confused about exactly what Moore's Law states. From
http://www.ebtmag.com/issue/9607/07sr5.htm:

   Moore's law, which states that the number of transistors per
   chip doubles every two years,

>From the Jargon file, e.g.
http://www-sc.ucssc.indiana.edu/cgi-bin/jargon/00000462.html:

   Moore's Law: /morz law/ prov. The observation that the logic
   density of silicon integrated circuits has closely followed the
   curve (bits per square inch) = 2^((t - 1962)) where t
   is time in years; that is, the amount of information storable in
   one square inch of silicon has roughly doubled yearly every year
   since the technology was invented. See also Parkinson's Law of
   Data.

>From an article by Gordon Bell,
http://www.research.microsoft.com/research/BARC/GBell/MicroprocessorReport.htm:

   It is safe to predict the 2047 computers will be at least 100,000 times
   more powerful. If hardware continues to evolve at the annual factor
   of 1.60 rate we know as Moore's Law, (Moore, 1996) then computers that
   are 10 billion times more powerful will exist! Magnetic storage density
   and fiber optic data transmission rates, have evolved at the 60% rate
   (a doubling every 18 months, or 100 times per decade), too.

So, I have doublings every two years, every year, and every 18 months,
all offered as statement of Moore's Law.

I suspect Moore originally said doubling either every one or every two
years, and revised this to doubling every 18 months. But it would be
interesting to know the truth.

Hal



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