Low Voltage Is Key To Energy-Efficient Chip
An anonymous reader writes in with news from the International Solid State Circuits Conference in San Francisco of a new energy-efficient chip designed by researchers at MIT. It's said to be able to run on 1/10 the power of current chips. Texas Instruments worked with MIT on the design, which is maybe five years from production. "The key to the chip's improved energy efficiency lies in making it work at a reduced voltage level, according to... a member of the chip design project team. Most of the mobile processors today operate at about 1 volt. The requirement for MIT's new design, however, drops to 0.3 volts."
I see someone tagged this "noshitsherlock". But this is a hard thing to do because the difference between "0" and "0.3" is smaller than "5" lowering the immunity to upsets like noise.
That's why your cell phone has an ARM CPU and not an x86.
Engineering is the art of compromise.
Sure some CISCs have a RISC under the hood, but that just means you need to have a "virtual machine" that emulates a CISC on top of the RISC. Those extra layers mean more internal operations which mean more switching.
Engineering is the art of compromise.
Of course I just knew some jackass was going to use this fact to try to downplay the achievement. Okay, yeah, every computer engineer knows that to reduce power by four you drop the voltage by half, but the trick is actually making this work. That's why not every chip runs on 1E-20 Volts, Mr. Anonymous Idiot.
The enemies of Democracy are
I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.
The core voltage and the I/O voltage (which is where SSO is a concern) need not be the same, and rarely are in advanced processes. I'm sure the I/O's are not 0.3V. The rest of your comment was similarly confusing: using gate oxides aren't a "trick" (they're pretty much a requirement,) 65nm and under are more than "slightly" better then 90nm "in some ways," and I don't know what curve you're talking about.
everything in moderation