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Gordon Moore On Moore's Law

missingmatterboy writes: "Technology Review has a wide-ranging interview with Gordon Moore, wherein he discusses the future of computers, his famous 'Moore's Law,' the need for better education, the environment, and finally, why he, along with Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard, picked up the tab for SETI. Cool guy." Who better to ask about the future?

25 of 136 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Moore's Law (or why Intel is losing to AMD late by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4
    I remember reading last year that when AMD was beating the pants off of them with the 1G Athlon, Intel was still revved for producing P3-600's, more in line with Moore's law.

    Selective memory, perhaps? AMD announced the 1GHz Athlon mere hours before Intel announced the Penium III 1GHz. It's a shame that such a lame bunch of partisan "misrememberance" is rated so highly.

  2. Re:Predicting the future by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5

    Linux user since early January 1992.

    My cock is bigger than your cock.

  3. Predicting the future by mce · · Score: 4
    Who better to ask about the future?

    With all due respect for one of the true giants of the semiconductor and IT industries, but I don't think he has to be the best man to ask about the future. Not because he says so himself (for those who didn't read the article: he does), but because he's been involved in it for so long already.

    In general, the fate of all experts (especially in a world moving as fast as ours does nowadays) is that, with aging, they inevitably get to a point where they don't see the changes coming anymore. They end up relying more and more on extrapolations of their own (sometimes vast, but still very limited) knowledge and experience. At some point these extrapolations break down completely. IMHO, it's a rare person who understands this to be applicable to himself or herself in time. Those who do, stop making predictions years into the future anyway.

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  4. Re:2 Years or 18 months by grub · · Score: 5

    This article says that the Moore's Law says the number of transistors will double every two years. I always heard it was every 18 months.

    That was metric years.
    --
    Trolling is a art,
  5. Re:Chances of Finding Extraterrestrial life by Dr.Dubious+DDQ · · Score: 4
    [...]then take the chances that that intelligent life would live long enough to develop radio[...]

    I once read an article (or was it a chapter of a book? Can't remember now) discussing the infamous "Drake Equation" (regarding the probability of detecting intelligent life via SETI).

    The author had pointed out that the variable intended to represent how long a form of intelligent life existed before dying off really meant "how long a form of intelligent life broadcasts detectably in the radio spectrum", as far as SETI is concerned.

    The author then speculated that strong, readily detectable radio signals from Earth will have been going roughly 100 years before cable, fiberoptics, and other "non-broadcast" means of communication start supplanting them.

    He then plugged THAT number into the Drake Equation and got...1.
    "That must be us." the author quipped...

    Not that I have a problem with SETI or anything, but I found the argument very interesting...


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  6. Self Fulfilling? by HardCase · · Score: 4
    I think that Moore's "Law" is just a self-fulfilling prophecy. For 30 years or so, it's been a pretty reasonable estimate of the performance of the industry, but it's exponential in nature, so that means that at some point, the number of transistors on a device is just going to become too big. And that point is within a few years.

    The .13 micron processes that are state of the art right now are actually pretty big compared to what would be required in a few years, at least by Moore's Law. The problem is that technologies are lagging behind the "Law". A prime example is in lithography. Commercially practical sub-.1 micron lithography doesn't exist. Extreme UV hopes to drive device sizes down to as low as .04 microns, but it's still very experimental, even in its 4th year of development.

    Not to belittle Gordon Moore and his "Law", but I think that it's about to give out. Of course, what we call Moore's Law was really nothing more than an off the cuff remark by an "important person", so by following it, the semiconductor industry has validated it.

    Anyway, I don't think that it matters whether or not the industry follows it...after all, what we're really after is faster, better devices. And if it's possible to get there without following Moore's Law, then what's the difference? I think that's where we're headed.

    -h-

  7. The question they should have asked by rw2 · · Score: 4
    Why is it that Intel's stock price is so closely tracking the inverse Moore's law lately? :-)

    Thank god I own AMD...

    --
    Poliglut

    1. Re:The question they should have asked by DarenN · · Score: 4

      Maybe it's because Intel got into bed with RAMBUS, and after a little foreplay signed the prenup. Then, on the honeymoon, after some more serious foreplay let their hand stray downwards, and found.....

      Well, considering an article posted earlier, you can finish that in your own head. :o)

      Add that to the fact that AMD's lower clocked chips are outperforming the P4's in many ways, and that Intel techs were giving out publicly about the design restrictions put on them by use of the RDRAM, and the general downturn in Tech company fortunes on the stock exchange recently, and you have many reasons.

      Sorry about the serious (and incomplete) response, but I'm just too tired, and my sense of humour has gone to sleep without me (the bastard). *yawn*

      I like the way he is supporting "unusual" research, though. It's the stuff that everyone considers insane that can work ou the coolest, like the Wright brothers and flying. Their neighbours must've thought them mad!
      And I'd like to hear more on his ideas of "practical enviornmentalism". Too many enviornmentalists are radical thugs and enviornmentalism is excuse they are using now.
      And the other end of the spectrum is just as bad (G.W Bush - "I'll protect the enviornment as long as those corporations that are my buddies don't need those areas to make more money than you, Joe Sixpack, could dream of". [BTW, I paraphrased])

      Yes that last statement was flamebait, and I'm not even a citizen of the US. So sue me :o)

      --
      Rational thought is the only true freedom
  8. How odd by SuperKendall · · Score: 4

    Yes, how odd. Someone who probably knows an order of mangnitude more about the Kyoto treaty than you claiming that Bush is on the pragmatic end of protecting the environment and probbably will be OK, while you on the other had are pretty sure Bush would be willing to nuke all national parks from orbit, if only he had the nukes to spare.

    I wonder who has the viewpoint that people should pay "moore" attention to? Happily for you around here it's sure not Moore!

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  9. What we don't know by labradore · · Score: 4

    I think that we're pretty low on the curve of being able to find stuff in general, let alone inteligent life. I for one loose my keys and my wallet almost every day for at period of about five minutes and then there's my cell phone for which I sometimes conduct near-exhaustive searches of my domain only to find that it is in my pocket. I'm not the brightest but I know that there are a shitload of people dumber than me (e.g. Clinton/Gore supporters and the 70-odd percent of the population that believes in creationism instead of darwinsim). Granted some of the brightest minds on the planet are doing the searching but the fact that they rely on us--the ignorant masses--for their survival shows pretty clearly that they're no even near optimal vs. our actual capacity to conduct the search.

    If the life is truely intelligent then it is avioding us because lord knows we're not too friendly. If you are an inteligent species outside of the planet earth and less powerful than us we'll probably conquer you and if you're more powerful then we'll do whatever we can to become more powerful so that we may later conquer you. Why do I think so? Well, that's pretty much been our modus operandus for all of recorded history.

    Then there's the issue of what we can reliably detect. We do know for certian that every one of our ideas about physics basically only works in the domain we can easily observe and even sometimes in our observable domain we don't have good ways to explain what the hell is going on. Add the problem that we're pretty sure that most of the universe consists of dark matter and dark energy that we can't even detect yet and you get the idea that as our gaze wonders past the limits of our biosphere our quality of perception decreases (i'm guessing!) exponentially.

    There's some major drawbacks to our existance that I think will stunt our ability to overcome our myopia. One is the fact that we're trapped in linear time and we can only traverse our time in a single direction at a fixed rate. Also we live in only 3 physical dimentions. While this 3D existance seems pretty advanced to us (ask SGI or Nvidia) there's plenty of scientists out there much smarter than I am who are embarassed to try to even explain how we're missing out on the action in the higher echelons of dimentionality (why?--even the small portion of us who even accept the idea that there are more dimentions tend to forget about it pretty easily which is illustrated by the death-rate for passengers of motor-vehicles.)

    Do I think we should give up because we won't find anything anyhow? Hell no! We aught to pour all our money and resources into searching, colonizing and exploring outer space. We've got nuclear weapons, acid rain, rising sea levels and major league baseball. That is proof enough for me that this planet is fucked and it really is time to move on. I, for one, have a lot of new and exciting ideas for how we can screw up other habitats and no one is going to let me try that stuff around here. I want to move on.

    If you haven't noticed the USA is the most powerful and free country in the world because it was created by people who habitually run away from civilization because they would rather try to survive alone in an (relatively) unknown wilderness than live with the schmuks they grew up with. Did I mention that a lot of the time the wilderness to which they ran posed significant threats of death, dismemberment or even boredom. Well guess what? There's no more wilderness! We filled it with schmuks! The implication here is that we're going to have either learn to live with eachother or devolve into a society similar to the europeans and probably become, like them, a bunch of socialist wimps with traditions and culture and all that other garbage. We need space! It's our final frontier!

    I will give everything I own and hold dear to anyone who can get me off this rock to someplace where I can be away from the rest of these jerks--even if there is significant danger of boredom! Long live NASA. Long live SETI (but not too long because it goddamned better start working soon or i'm going to have to detonate a nuclear device). Cordially, Rob

  10. Re:Chances of Finding Extraterrestrial life by Chris+Brewer · · Score: 4

    According to the Drake equation, the number of communicable civilisations in the galaxy increases by one per year of our looking.

    Explanation here
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    Consultancy: If you're not part of the solution, there's money to be made in prolonging the problem
  11. Moore on Technical education by hooded1 · · Score: 4

    In this interview Moore mention that the chief reason that more people are not entering into the technical field is that kids are not really properly introduced to it in thier pre-college years. I fully agree with this belief, but i also think it is due to some other factors. Although a nerd's status in society has greatly improved since the eighties, there still exists a stereotype that nerds(hackers, engineers...) are socially inept and romantically unatractive. This belief is instilled in most children, forever deterrering them from a deep interest in computers. To some degree of course this stereotype is true, but then again most people who have highly developed social skills and popular personalities are the ones who tend to avoid the technical fields.

    --
    A rabbit in the hand is worth 4 in the cage
  12. Moore's Law and SETI@home by eheien · · Score: 4
    One interesting application of Moore's Law is to distributed computers like SETI@home. One of the major problems with SETI work is that it requires a supercomputer to analyze all the radio signal data coming in. By the time that the computer has been constructed and running for a few months, however, it's already obsolete.

    But when the system is constructed with thousands of individual PCs, which get upgraded anyway every few years, the entire computer gets a speed boost without having to be completely redesigned and rebuilt. I'd be curious to see how well the speed increase of SETI@home has matched Moore's Law over the two years since its conception, I bet it is pretty close.

  13. Re:$Bush &Moore by RedWizzard · · Score: 4
    Still, I kind of like the guy giving away 50% of his fortune (wouldn't see old $Bill doing that!)
    Actually that's exactly the sort of thing Gates would do. He already gives a lot of money away and I believe he's stated that he doesn't intend to leave much to his kids. Yes, his company is morally bankrupt but he really believes that he is doing right by his customers. He's a fanatic, he's not Satan.
  14. Yeah egalitarianism!!! by the+real+jeezus · · Score: 4

    It's refreshing to see someone share the wealth like Gordon Moore does. These days, it seems that the accountants decide the fate of speculative research--How silly, especially when nearly all revolutionizing discoveries throughout history were due to sheer accidents or wacked-out ideas. Open letter to all you *illionaires: you can't take it with you!

    I think /. should interview him. I would like to find out what he thinks about psychedelics.



    Ewige Blumenkraft!
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    Ewige Blumenkraft!
  15. Why not? by Bitmanhome · · Score: 4
    Gordo said thusly:
    The federal government clearly can't give all of its support to Caltech and MIT. But I lean toward making the best even better. We don't want to build the infrastructure necessary to give away $100 million in $20,000 grants. We would be much more likely to look at the needs of an entire school, rather than trying to do individual projects.
    Why not?? We're not the Borg, alot of progress comes from individuals and small groups pursuing their own ideas. We already have foundations giving large money to a few schools .. why not one that's willing to give small funding to a large number of projects?

    I think it would be cool to give $5,000-20,000 grants to masters and doctorate students to finish their research, and make something useful out of it. If other people find it useful, then a company can buy it and market it. With $100 mil to give away, they can certainly afford the infrastructure.

    Hmm .. I seem to remember this topic being discussed before (hasn't everything?) but I can't seem to find it..

    -B

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    Not that this wasn't entirely predictable.
  16. General Flexability by Migelikor1 · · Score: 5

    I think people generally forget that "Moore's Law" was an off the cuff optimistic guess made in an interview with Electronics Magazine in 1965. He was pretty lucky with his guess, which has held generally true for the last 35 years. The guess of exponential growth fit in really nicely with the growing industry, and emergence of the microchip in everyday life. Greater demand meant greater research, and lower prices, spurring even greater demand. However, I see a set of different factors greatly slowing that cycle. First, as Moore said in the interview, the limits of the medium. Sub-atomic transistors are still pretty far on the horizon, and our current designs can't get much smaller. Second, a factor Moore didn't mention, the eventual market saturation. There is no radical new application on the horizon for the microchip to cause its continued spread at such a great rate. Sure, we all like to get faster, and faster computers, but most people already have somthing that works. Unless a new market opens, investment will slow, as will research, and the entire cycle will slow.

    --
    My Karma is so good, I'm the Dalai Lama...or something.
  17. Moore's New Law by Peridriga · · Score: 4

    So more made a law.... then he changed it... now he's changed it again (but, made it so the law changes on it's own?) [intresting idea]

    so.... This is how it goes
    It every 2 years the number of tranistors in chips will double
    Every 10 years that number (e.g. 2) will double.
    Every 15 years Moore will change his law again.


    --- My Karma is bigger than your...
    ------ This sentence no verb

  18. Chances of Finding Extraterrestrial life by webmaestro · · Score: 5

    If the number of transistors on a chip doubles every two years, does that mean that our chances of finding extraterrestrial life also double every two years?

    Tyler

  19. Moore's OTHER law by Tyler+Eaves · · Score: 5

    The number of idiots using computers is directly proportionate to the number of AOL CDs

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    TODO: Something witty here...
  20. Moore's Law by mkarpinski · · Score: 4

    If you look back to the early days of computer development (circa 1940s) to current technology and extrapolate the amount of computing cycles/$1000 ---- You will find that Moore's Law holds even before silicon. Therefore, it is reasonable to assume that Moore's Law will hold even after we have reached the limits of silicon technology (predicted within the next 15 years).

    --
    As below, so above and beyond, I imagine drawn beyond the lines of reason. Push the envelope. Watch it bend.
  21. The Fermi objection by s20451 · · Score: 4

    The great physicist Enrico Fermi raised the following objection to the existence of extraterrestrial intelligence (as distinct from extraterrestrial life):

    It should take about 1-10 million years for an intelligent race to colonize a space the size of our galaxy, even without faster-than-light travel. (The argument is exponential - we form n colonies, then they form n colonies each, and so on.) Since this is a tiny fraction of the age of the galaxy, there should be evidence of extraterrestrial intelligence everywhere. So, where is everybody?

    One could say that perhaps other forms of intelligent life dislike exploration, or that they don't interfere in the affairs of other civilizations, or that they leave no trace of their presence. But the one data point we have (humanity) is keen on exploration, isn't shy at all about interfering in the affairs of others, and is pretty bad at cleaning up after itself.

    This is being accepted by a growing number of SETI researchers, who believe (somewhat controversially) that humanity is the most advanced form of life in our own galaxy, at least.

    --
    Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
  22. The Goku Rebuttal by Flying+Headless+Goku · · Score: 5

    Perhaps, once a civilization reaches a high enough level of development, its citizens become satisfied and cease interacting with the universe, like an enlightened yogi disappearing into his own navel.

    In our case, this is happening with automated production and escapist entertainment. Once we have nanotechnology and perfect virtual reality, we will be able to trick ourselves into eternal happiness, and won't want to bother with anything else.

    Any pleasure-driven intelligence which learns to satisfy its survival needs without effort will eventually just turn on its pleasure center and live in perfect contentment.

    Not that it really makes a difference. They may be out there, but they don't want to be bothered.
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  23. Great quote by 6EQUJ5 · · Score: 5


    "Even a small probability multiplied by 10^22 gets pretty big."

    If only common people understood such things. Be it the chance of two hydrogen atoms fusing in the sun, or the emergence of a technological world...

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  24. Re:Moore's Law (or why Intel is losing to AMD late by rahvin112 · · Score: 4

    I remember reading last year that when AMD was beating the pants off of them with the 1G Athlon, Intel was still revved for producing P3-600's, more in line with Moore's law.

    Maybe you forget that there isn't a difference in the number of transistors in P3 600's and P3 1000's. Clock speed has nothing to do with Moores "Law".