Help plz.. Quick reply would be highly appreciated.

July 25th, 2016

If Moore’s law reaches the borders of technical feasibility – what comes next?
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rodey

Answer #1
I need a few ideas. thats it.
Answer #2
No idea what you are speaking about dude.
Answer #3

Hell Yeah wrote: Select all

No idea what you are speaking about dude.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moore%27s_law
Considering this doesn’t look like a discussion topic, I’m moving this to helpdesk. If you want to start a discussion concerning what comes next after Moore’s law in SD, feel free to do so – just remember to read Enigma’s sticky thread before you do.
To answer your question – who knows? The only certain thing is that it can’t keep going on to the infinity. The 11 nm node will probably be here by 2018(?). Then perhaps we will use new materials to create magnetic semiconductors. But after that no-one can tell. Perhaps parallel computing? Maybe quantum computing, or DNA-computing or nano-tube based computers.The only sure thing is that Moore’s law is not a law, just an observation and doesn’t have to be followed. Perhaps Moore’s observation will just stop corresponding with the data and we’ll begin creating computers that are superior only at a slower pace.
Answer #4
Graphene transistors are in the works with operating frequencies in the terahertz range. Currently, the material is too expensive to mass produce.
Answer #5

To answer your question - who knows? The only certain thing is that it can't keep going on to the infinity. The 11 nm node will probably be here by 2018(?). Then perhaps we will use new materials to create magnetic semiconductors. But after that no-one can tell. Perhaps parallel computing? Maybe quantum computing, or DNA-computing or nano-tube based computers.The only sure thing is that Moore's law is not a law, just an observation and doesn't have to be followed. Perhaps Moore's observation will just stop corresponding with the data and we'll begin creating computers that are superior only at a slower pace.

Thanks a lot for that.. will be really good if you could gimme lil more information
Answer #6
Bounce!
Answer #7
I can’t give you much more information really. Your best bet is to search for scientific studies about it.
These few links might be useful:
www.cc.gatech.edu/classes/AY2005/cs4290_spring/MooresLaw.pdf
http://www.forbes.com/2010/04/29/moores-law-computing-processing-opinions-contributors-bill-dally.html
www.doc.mmu.ac.uk/STAFF/M.Amos/Docs/dnacomp.pdf
arxiv.org/pdf/cs/0405004 (save as pdf)

Whatever is the future, Moore’s observation will -eventually- stop being true.
Also, threads in helpdesk may only be bumped once every 48 hours since the last reply.