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#transistor #transistors #moore's_law #moore #semiconductor #transistors_on_a_chip #microchip #microprocessors #intel #end_of_moore's_law #break_moore's_law #moore's_law_breakКомментарии:
Whoohaa 😮 did Peter Tägtgren doesnt make music anymore?
🤣
Just kidding. This prof. Morello is awesome. Youre anazing.😊
Apple just released a 3nm processor 😊
ОтветитьNow some transistors are 5nm.
ОтветитьAugust 2023: 3nm by 2025
ОтветитьGreat explanation of transistors, and how quantum computing is trying to supplement that. However, a couple of comments on Moore's law. It was originally not about size of transistors, but about cost reduduction. Shrinking the design rules was for a long time the main path to achieve lower cost per transistor, and the fairly recent introduction of EUV lithography allowed for continued scaling in that way. In addition, there are other ways to get more transistors onto the same area at a lower cost, such as optimizing the chip layout to reduce wasted area, flipping transistors on their side, moving auxilary structures out of the high density area, multi-story structures, and more. With that, there are easily another 10 years of continued improvement possible, likely more, before quantum effects will limit the advancements.
ОтветитьAm ya Moor
Am ya Moor
You make unpocoloco
FET? I learned my craft with Collector|Emitter and Base. (I have remembered this correctly?)
cheers!
Yet here we are, 10 years later, with 100x more transistors per chip and a doubling rate of ~18months.
ОтветитьThis video deserves a 10 years later update.
ОтветитьMOSFETs are similiar to vacuum tubes in some ways: They are both voltage controlled switches/valves.
Ответить"2 volts" relative to what?
Collector, emitter, base, no ground.
revisit with this guy, 10 years have past, how have we progressed from his perspective! revisit!!
Ответитьthis guy is really concise and got his shit together... knowledge and teaching alike ... fantastic
ОтветитьYou can tell this guy really knows what he is talking about by how simple he makes it look.
ОтветитьMy phone has 16 billion transistors. I'm watching this 10 years after the video came out
ОтветитьNot looking too good
ОтветитьThis guy explained it so well that he probably understood everything himself )
ОтветитьIntel is trying to stack them which could create even denser CPU's with more transistors. Also they are looking for a semiconductor material that has a smaller atom size! Genius
ОтветитьI wonder if a radiative matter could be you
ОтветитьMoore passed recently, and it's right around when Moores law is gonna become a thing of the past... sugoi
ОтветитьRIP Moore
Ответитьnear 10 years later and I still come back for the voice
ОтветитьCan not believe this is 9 years old, it’s like yesterday that I watched it. There’s no way around it peeps, we’re getting old.
ОтветитьMoores law will stop at one point. Because at smaller scale, quantum irregularities become more common. You cant have transistor with electrons that jump from one space to another by probability.
My prediction, the smallest, yet stable transistor would be around 1nm. Right now, commercially smallest available transistor is around 6-8nm. Basically, we are at the peak. 10 years from now, the peak of computer will be achieved.
Now in 2023 4nm when we thought 22nm was tiny
ОтветитьIncarnation of Newton?
ОтветитьThat very last bit in the credits seems to me to be the most important thing. "Which is as many particles as there are in the universe." Every time something like a Star Trek type teleportation or hyperspace/FTL travel or planetary terraforming or something in that realm comes up the limiting factor, the technologically limiting factor - there's still ethical limiting factors to consider, is often stated as being that it would take a computer with more storage and processing power than there are particles in the universe. There are so many wonders possible. We could, in our lifetimes remake this world into a paradise with that kind of power if we could stop killing each other over who is more chosen by a bronze age mythological being or who is superior to who.
Ответитьcareful with that face you gonna cut someone
ОтветитьMoores laws gnrlly sth can go wrong it will.
Tranzistors pretty scary tho.
Day by day more seamless.
Fantastic explanation
Ответить3 mn now!
Ответить50 atoms 9 years ago, I guess that means the rule broke
ОтветитьI Read Somewhere that the Electron Really has a Positive Charge and it was mistaken for a Negative Charge When Static Electricity was Discovered with a Silk Cloth and a Glass Rod. it's a Fact Look it up.
Ответить2025 is in 3 years from now, actually 2 and a half wtf
ОтветитьThank you >great knowledgeable instructor>promotes exciting electronics.
ОтветитьCan we get this guy a BETTER THUMBNAIL ❗️‼️❗️‼️
ОтветитьHe explained this so clearly that I feel I should have a diploma from watching this!
ОтветитьThe graphic isnt a representation of a logarithmic function,but linear function.
Ответить7nm AMD says hi from 2022
ОтветитьI would listen to this man read the ingredients off a bottle of steak sauce. Give him his own channel!
Ответитьwhat is called the technique of filming with a very zoomed image and moving the camera like one is drunk?
I've notice this pattern in videos such like this. Thannks
I promise myself I want to become smart like this guy
ОтветитьHe deserves to be videoed by a professional. Whoever is filming is terrible.
ОтветитьGive this guy a rave to go to.
ОтветитьWhat happens to civilization when technological advancement stagnates?
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