Moore's law
Moore's law describes a trend in the history of computer hardware. The number of transistors that can be inexpensively placed on an integrated circuit is increasing exponentially, doubling approximately every two years.[1] The trend was first observed by Intel co-founder Gordon E. Moore in a 1965 paper.[2][3][4] It has continued for half a century and is not expected to stop for another decade at least and perhaps much longer.[5]
Almost every measure of the capabilities of digital electronic devices is linked to Moore's law: processing speed, memory capacity, even the resolution of digital cameras. All of these are improving at (roughly) exponential rates as well.[6] This has dramatically increased the usefulness of digital electronics in nearly every segment of the world economy.[7] Moore's law describes this driving force of technological and social change in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.
History
A few people had predicted similar increases in computer power years before Moore published his observation. Alan Turing in a 1950 paper had predicted that by the turn of the century we would have computers on our desk with a billion words of memory.[8] Moore may have heard Douglas Engelbart, a co-inventor of today's mechanical computer mouse, discuss the projected downscaling of integrated circuit size in a 1960 lecture.[9]
Moore's original statement that transistor counts had doubled every year can be found in his publication "Cramming more components onto integrated circuits", Electronics Magazine 19 April, 1965:
The complexity for minimum component costs has increased at a rate of roughly a factor of two per year ... Certainly over the short term this rate can be expected to continue, if not to increase. Over the longer term, the rate of increase is a bit more uncertain, although there is no reason to believe it will not remain nearly constant for at least 10 years. That means by 1975, the number of components per integrated circuit for minimum cost will be 65,000. I believe that such a large circuit can be built on a single wafer.[2]
The term "Moore's law" was coined around 1970 by the Caltech professor, VLSI pioneer, and entrepreneur Carver Mead.[10][3]
In 1975, Moore altered his projection to a doubling every two years. Despite popular misconception, he is adamant that he did not predict a doubling "every 18 months". However, an Intel colleague had factored in the increasing performance of transistors to conclude that integrated circuits would double in performance every 18 months.[11]
In April 2005, Intel offered $10,000 to purchase a copy of the original Electronics Magazine.[12] David Clark, an engineer living in the UK, was the first to find a copy and offer it to Intel.[13]
Other formulations and similar laws
Several measures of digital technology are improving at exponential rates related to Moore's law, including the size, cost, density and speed of components. Moore himself wrote only about the density of components (or transistors) at minimum cost. He noted:
Moore's law has been the name given to everything that changes exponentially. I say, if Gore invented the Internet,[14] I invented the exponential.[15]
Transistors per integrated circuit. The most popular formulation is of the doubling of the number of transistors on integrated circuits every two years. At the end of the 1970s, Moore's law became known as the limit for the number of transistors on the most complex chips. Recent trends show that this rate has been maintained into 2007.
Density at minimum cost per transistor. This is the formulation given in Moore's 1965 paper.[2] It is not about just the density of transistors that can be achieved, but about the density of transistors at which the cost per transistor is the lowest.[16] As more transistors are put on a chip, the cost to make each transistor decreases, but the chance that the chip will not work due to a defect increases. In 1965, Moore examined the density of transistors at which cost is minimized, and observed that, as transistors were made smaller through advances in photolithography, this number would increase at "a rate of roughly a factor of two per year".[2]
Cost per transistor. As the size of transistors has decreased, the cost per transistor has decreased as well.[citation needed] However, the manufacturing cost per unit area has only increased over time, since materials and energy expenditures per unit area have only increased with each successive technology node.
Computing performance per unit cost. Also, as the size of transistors shrinks, the speed at which they operate increases. It is also common to cite Moore's law to refer to the rapidly continuing advance in computing performance per unit cost, because increase in transistor count is also a rough measure of computer processing performance. On this basis, the performance of computers per unit cost—or more colloquially, "bang per buck"—doubles every 24 months.[citation needed]
Power consumption. the power consumption of compute nodes doubles every 18 months.[17]
Hard disk storage cost per unit of information. A similar law (sometimes called Kryder's Law) has held for hard disk storage cost per unit of information.[18] The rate of progression in disk storage over the past decades has actually sped up more than once, corresponding to the utilization of error correcting codes, the magnetoresistive effect and the giant magnetoresistive effect. The current rate of increase in hard drive capacity is roughly similar to the rate of increase in transistor count. Recent trends show that this rate has been maintained into 2007.
RAM storage capacity. Another version states that RAM storage capacity increases at the same rate as processing power.
Network capacity According to Gerry/Gerald Butters,[19][20] the former head of Lucent's Optical Networking Group at Bell Labs, there is another version, called Butter's Law of Photonics,[21] a formulation which deliberately parallels Moore's law. Butter's law[22] says that the amount of data coming out of an optical fiber is doubling every nine months. Thus, the cost of transmitting a bit over an optical network decreases by half every nine months. The availability of wavelength-division multiplexing (sometimes called "WDM") increased the capacity that could be placed on a single fiber by as much as a factor of 100. Optical networking and DWDM is rapidly bringing down the cost of networking, and further progress seems assured. As a result, the wholesale price of data traffic collapsed in the dot-com bubble. Nielsen's Law says that the bandwidth available to users increases by 50% annually.[23]
Pixels per dollar. Similarly, Barry Hendy of Kodak Australia has plotted the "pixels per dollar" as a basic measure of value for a digital camera, demonstrating the historical linearity (on a log scale) of this market and the opportunity to predict the future trend of digital camera price and resolution.
Moore's law as a target for industry and a self-fulfilling prophecy
Although Moore's law was initially made in the form of an observation and forecast, the more widely it became accepted, the more it served as a goal for an entire industry. This drove both marketing and engineering departments of semiconductor manufacturers to focus enormous energy aiming for the specified increase in processing power that it was presumed one or more of their competitors would soon actually attain. In this regard, it can be viewed as a self-fulfilling prophecy.[24][25]
Manufacturing costs and Moore's second law
As the cost of computer power to the consumer falls, the cost for producers to fulfill Moore's law follows an opposite trend: R&D, manufacturing, and test costs have increased steadily with each new generation of chips. Rising manufacturing costs are an important consideration for the sustaining of Moore's law.[26] This had led to the formulation of "Moore's second law," which is that the capital cost of a semiconductor fab also increases exponentially over time.[27][28]
Materials required for advancing technology (e.g., photoresists and other polymers and industrial chemicals) are derived from natural resources such as petroleum and so are affected by the cost and supply of these resources. Nevertheless, photoresist costs are coming down through more efficient delivery, though shortage risks remain.[29]
The cost to tape-out a chip at 90 nm is at least US$1,000,000, and exceeds US$3,000,000 for 65 nm.[30]
Future trends
Computer industry technology "road maps' predict (as of 2001) that Moore's law will continue for several chip generations. Depending on the doubling time used in the calculations, this could mean up to a hundredfold increase in transistor count per chip within a decade. The semiconductor industry technology roadmap uses a three-year doubling time for microprocessors, leading to a tenfold increase in the next decade.[31] Intel was reported in 2005 as stating that the downsizing of silicon chips with good economics can continue during the next decade[32] and in 2008 as predicting the trend through 2029.[33] In fact, Moore's Law has accelerated in the case of NAND Flash memory, which is used for storage in digital cameras, flash drives, MP3 players, and most recently, solid-state drives (SSDs).
Some of the new directions in research that may allow Moore's law to continue are:
- Intel's prediction of increasing use of materials other than silicon was verified in mid-2006, as was its intent of using trigate transistors from around 2009 [citation needed].
- Researchers from IBM and Georgia Tech created a new speed record when they ran a silicon/germanium helium supercooled transistor at 500 gigahertz (GHz).[34] The transistor operated above 500 GHz at 4.5 K (−451°F/−268.65°C)[35] and simulations showed that it could likely run at 1 THz (1,000 GHz). This trial only tested a single transistor, however. Practical desktop CPUs running at this speed are extremely unlikely using contemporary silicon chip techniques [citation needed].
- In early 2006, IBM researchers announced that they had developed a technique to print circuitry only 29.9 nm wide using deep-ultraviolet (DUV, 193-nanometer) optical lithography. IBM claims that this technique may allow chipmakers to use current methods for seven years while continuing to achieve results forecast by Moore's law. New methods that can achieve smaller circuits are expected to be substantially more expensive.
- On January 27, 2007, Intel demonstrated a working 45nm chip codenamed "Penryn", intending mass production to begin in late 2007.[36] A decade before then, chips were built using a 350 nm process.
- Companies are working on using nanotechnology to solve the complex engineering problems involved in producing chips at the 32 nm and smaller levels. (The diameter of a silicon atom is on the order of 0.2 nm.)
- In April of 2008, researchers at HP Labs announced the creation of a working "memristor": a fourth basic passive circuit element whose existence had previously only been theorized. The memristor's unique properties allow for the creation of smaller and better-performing electronic devices.[37] This memristor bears some resemblance to resistive memory (CBRAM or RRAM) developed independently and recently by other groups for non-volatile memory applications.
While this time horizon for Moore's law scaling is possible, it does not come without underlying engineering challenges. One of the major challenges in integrated circuits that use nanoscale transistors is increase in parameter variation and leakage currents. As a result of variation and leakage, the design margins available to do predictive design are becoming harder. Such systems also dissipate considerable power even when not switching. Adaptive and statistical design along with leakage power reduction is critical to sustain scaling of CMOS. A good treatment of these topics is covered in Leakage in Nanometer CMOS Technologies. Other scaling challenges include:
- The ability to control parasitic resistance and capacitance in transistors,
- The ability to reduce resistance and capacitance in electrical interconnects,
- The ability to maintain proper transistor electrostatics to allow the gate terminal to control the ON/OFF behavior,
- Increasing effect of line edge roughness,
- Dopant fluctuations,
- System level power delivery,
- Thermal design to effectively handle the dissipation of delivered power, and
- Solving all these challenges at an ever-reducing manufacturing cost of the overall system.
Ultimate limits of the law
On April 13, 2005, Gordon Moore stated in an interview that the law cannot be sustained indefinitely: "It can't continue forever. The nature of exponentials is that you push them out and eventually disaster happens" and noted that transistors would eventually reach the limits of miniaturization at atomic levels:
In terms of size [of transistor] you can see that we're approaching the size of atoms which is a fundamental barrier, but it'll be two or three generations before we get that far—but that's as far out as we've ever been able to see. We have another 10 to 20 years before we reach a fundamental limit. By then they'll be able to make bigger chips and have transistor budgets in the billions.[38]
In 1995, the "powerful" Digital Alpha 21164 chip had just over nine million transistors. This 64-bit processor was a technological spearhead at the time, even if the circuit’s market share remained average. Six years later, a state of the art microprocessor would have more than 40 million transistors. In 2015, it is believed that these processors should contain more than 15 billion transistors. Things are becoming smaller each year. If this continues, in theory, in less than 10 years computers will be created where each molecule will have its own place, i.e. we will have completely entered the era of molecular scale production.[39]
Others see the limits of the law as being far in the distant future. Lawrence Krauss and Glenn D. Starkman announced an ultimate limit of around 600 years in their paper "Universal Limits of Computation", based on rigorous estimation of total information-processing capacity of any system in the Universe.
Then again, the law has often met obstacles that appeared insurmountable, before soon surmounting them. In that sense, Moore says he now sees his law as more beautiful than he had realized: "Moore's law is a violation of Murphy's law. Everything gets better and better."[40]
Futurists and Moore's law
Extrapolation partly based on Moore's law has led futurists such as Vernor Vinge, Bruce Sterling, and Ray Kurzweil to speculate about a technological singularity. Kurzweil projects that a continuation of Moore's law until 2019 will result in transistor features just a few atoms in width. Although this means that the strategy of ever finer photolithography will have run its course, he speculates that this does not mean the end of Moore's law:
Moore's law of Integrated Circuits was not the first, but the fifth paradigm to forecast accelerating price-performance ratios. Computing devices have been consistently multiplying in power (per unit of time) from the mechanical calculating devices used in the 1890 U.S. Census, to [Newman's] relay-based "[Heath] Robinson" machine that cracked the Nazi [Lorenz cipher], to the CBS vacuum tube computer that predicted the election of Eisenhower, to the transistor-based machines used in the first space launches, to the integrated-circuit-based personal computer.[41]
Thus, Kurzweil conjectures that it is likely that some new type of technology will replace current integrated-circuit technology, and that Moore's Law will hold true long after 2020. He believes that the exponential growth of Moore's law will continue beyond the use of integrated circuits into technologies that will lead to the technological singularity. The Law of Accelerating Returns described by Ray Kurzweil has in many ways altered the public's perception of Moore's Law. It is a common (but mistaken) belief that Moore's Law makes predictions regarding all forms of technology, when it actually only concerns semiconductor circuits. Many futurists still use the term "Moore's law" in this broader sense to describe ideas like those put forth by Kurzweil.
Software: breaking the law
A sometimes misunderstood point is that exponentially improved hardware does not necessarily imply exponentially improved software performance to go with it. The productivity of software developers most assuredly does not increase exponentially with the improvement in hardware, but by most measures has increased only slowly and fitfully over the decades. Software tends to get larger and more complicated over time, and Wirth's law even states humorously that "Software gets slower faster than hardware gets faster".
There are problems where exponential increases in processing power are matched or exceeded by exponential increases in complexity as the problem size increases. (See computational complexity theory and complexity classes P and NP for a somewhat theoretical discussion of such problems, which occur very commonly in applications such as scheduling.)
Due to the mathematical power of exponential growth (similar to the financial power of compound interest), seemingly minor fluctuations in the relative growth rates of CPU performance, RAM capacity, and disk space per dollar have caused the relative costs of these three fundamental computing resources to shift markedly over the years, which in turn has caused significant changes in programming styles. For many programming problems, the developer has to decide on numerous time-space tradeoffs, and throughout the history of computing these choices have been strongly influenced by the shifting relative costs of CPU cycles versus storage space.
In addition to processor-usage/storage-space trade-offs, there is often a correlation between development time, application complexity, and application performance. One example of this would be the sorting algorithm insertion sort when compared to the quicksort algorithm. While an insertion sort is one of the easiest and least complex sorting algorithms to implement, it is also somewhat slow for large numbers of data. As processor performance increases, programmers may decide to implement slower and less complex algorithms in favor of a shorter development time.
Other considerations
Not all aspects of computing technology develop in capacities and speed according to Moore's law. Random Access Memory (RAM) speeds and hard drive seek times improve at best a few percentage points each year. Since the capacity of RAM and hard drives is increasing much faster than is their access speed, intelligent use of their capacity becomes more and more important. It now makes sense in many cases to trade space for time, such as by precomputing indexes and storing them in ways that facilitate rapid access, at the cost of using more disk and memory space: space is getting cheaper relative to time.
Moreover, there is a popular misconception that the clock speed of a processor determines its speed, also known as the Megahertz Myth. This actually also depends on the number of instructions per tick which can be executed (as well as the complexity of each instruction, see MIPS, RISC and CISC), and so the clock speed can only be used for comparison between two identical circuits. Of course, other factors must be taken into consideration such as the bus width and speed of the peripherals. Therefore, most popular evaluations of "computer speed" are inherently biased, without an understanding of the underlying technology. This was especially true during the Pentium era when popular manufacturers played with public perceptions of speed, focusing on advertising the clock rate of new products.[42]
Another popular misconception circulating Moore's law is the incorrect assumption that exponential processor transistor growth, as predicted by Moore, translates directly into proportional exponential increase processing power or processing speed. While the increase of transistors in processors usually have an increased effect on processing power or speed, the relationship between the two factors is not proportional. There are cases where a ~45% increase in processor transistors have translated to roughly 10-20% increase in processing power or speed.[43] Different processor families have different performance increases when transistor count is increased. More precisely, processor performance or power is more related to other factors such as microarchitecture, and clock speed within the same processor family. That is to say, processor performance can increase without increasing the number of transistors in a processor. (AMD64 processors had better overall performance compared to the late Pentium 4 series, which had more transistors).[44]
It is also important to note that transistor density in multi-core CPUs does not necessarily reflect a similar increase in practical computing power, due to the unparallelised nature of most applications.
See also
- Accelerating change
- Amdahl's law
- Bell's law
- Metcalfe's law
- Experience curve effects
- Exponential growth
- History of computing hardware (1960s-present)
- Hofstadter's law
- Kryder's law
- Logistic growth
- Nielsen's law
- Observations named after people
- Quantum computing
- Rock's law
- Second half of the chessboard
- Semiconductor
- Wirth's law "Software gets slower more rapidly than hardware gets faster."
References and notes
- ^ Although originally calculated as a doubling every year,[1] Moore later refined the period to two years.[2] It is often incorrectly quoted as a doubling of transistors every 18 months.
- ^ a b c d Moore, Gordon E. (1965). "Cramming more components onto integrated circuits" (PDF). Electronics Magazine. p. 4. Retrieved 2006-11-11. Cite error: The named reference "Moore1965paper" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ a b "Excerpts from A Conversation with Gordon Moore: Moore's Law" (PDF). Intel Corporation. 2005. p. 1. Retrieved 2006-05-02.
- ^
"1965 - "Moore's Law" Predicts the Future of Integrated Circuits" (html). Computer History Museum. ??. Retrieved November.
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Kanellos, Michael (10 February 2003). "Moore's law to roll on for another decade". cnet.
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(help) - ^ See Other formulations and similar laws
- ^ Rauch, Jonathan (1 January 2001), "The New Old Economy: Oil, Computers, and the Reinvention of the Earth", The Atlantic Monthly
- ^ Turing, Alan (October 1950). "Computing Machinery and Intelligence". Mind. 59 (236): 433–460. doi:10.1093/mind/LIX.236.433. ISSN 1460-2113. JSTOR 2251299. S2CID 14636783.
- ^ NY Times article April 17, 2005
- ^ Although it is often misquoted as a doubling every 18 months, Intel's official Moore's Law page, as well as an interview with Gordon Moore himself, states that it is every two years.
- ^ Michael Kanellos (2005-04-12). "$10,000 reward for Moore's Law original". CNET News.com. Retrieved 2006-06-24.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ "Moore's Law original issue found". BBC News Online. 2005-04-22. Retrieved 2007-07-10.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ Moore here is referring humourously to a widespread assertion that then-Vice President Al Gore once claimed to have invented the internet. This was, however, based on a misunderstanding.[3]
- ^ The Lives and Death of Moore's Law
- ^ Understanding Moore's Law
- ^ Wu-Chun Feng (October 2003). "Making a case for Efficient Supercomputing". ACM Queue. 1 (7).
- ^ Walter, Chip (2005-07-25). "Kryder's Law". Scientific American. (Verlagsgruppe Georg von Holtzbrinck GmbH). Retrieved 2006-10-29.
{{cite news}}
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(help) - ^ Forbes.com - Profile - Gerald Butters is a communications industry veteran
- ^ LAMBDA OpticalSystems - Board of Directors - Gerry Butters
- ^ As We May Communicate
- ^ Speeding net traffic with tiny mirrors
- ^ Nielsen's Law of Internet Bandwidth
- ^ Disco, Cornelius; van der Meulen, Barend (1998), Getting new technologies together, New York: Walter de Gruyter, pp. 206–207, ISBN 311015630X, OCLC 39391108, retrieved 23 August 2008
- ^ Gordon Moore calls his law a self fulfilling prophecy, according to "Gordon Moore Says Aloha to Moore's Law". the Inquirer. 13 April 2005. Retrieved 23 August 2008.
- ^ 2005 Infoworld article on Moore's law impact from rising costs and diminishing returns.
- ^ Does Moore's Law Still Hold?
- ^ Moore's Law article by Bob Schaller
- ^ 2006 Chemical & Engineering News article on materials suppliers challenged by rising costs
- ^ Reference: photomask costs
- ^ International Technology Roadmap
- ^ "New life for Moores Law". CNET News.com. 2006-04-19. Retrieved 2006-06-24.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ "Moore's Law: "We See No End in Sight," Says Intel's Pat Gelsinger". SYS-CON. 2008-05-01. Retrieved 2008-05-01.
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(help) - ^ "Chilly chip shatters speed record". BBC Online. 2006-06-20. Retrieved 2006-06-24.
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(help) - ^ "Georgia Tech/IBM Announce New Chip Speed Record". Georgia Institute of Technology. 2006-06-20. Retrieved 2006-06-24.
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"Meet the world's first 45 nm transistors". Intel. 2007-01-27. Retrieved 2007-01-24.
{{cite web}}
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/|date=
mismatch (help) - ^ Strukov, Dmitri B; Snider, Gregory S; Stewart, Duncan R; Williams, Stanley R (2008), "The missing memristor found", Nature, 453: 80–83, doi:10.1038/nature06932
- ^ Manek Dubash (2005-04-13). "Moore's Law is dead, says Gordon Moore". Techworld. Retrieved 2006-06-24.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ Waldner, Jean-Baptiste (2008). Nanocomputers and Swarm Intelligence. London: ISTE John Wiley & Sons. pp. p44-45. ISBN 1847040020.
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"Moore's Law at 40 - Happy birthday". The Economist. 2005-03-23. Retrieved 2006-06-24.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ Ray Kurzweil (2001-03-07). "The Law of Accelerating Returns". KurzweilAI.net. Retrieved 2006-06-24.
- ^ Matthew Broersma (2006-06-24). "Intel, Aberdeen attack AMD speed ratings". ZDNet UK. Retrieved 2006-06-24.
- ^ Anand Lal Shimpi (2004-07-21). "AnandTech: Intel's 90nm Pentium M 755: Dothan Investigated". Anadtech. Retrieved 2007-12-12.
- ^ Ilya Gavrichenkov (2005-02-20). "X-bit labs - Intel Pentium 4 6XX and Intel Pentium 4 Extreme Edition 3.73 GHz CPU Review (page 21)". X-bit labs. Retrieved 2007-12-12.
Further reading
Understanding Moore's Law: Four Decades of Innovation. Edited by David C. Brock. x + 122 pp. Chemical Heritage Press, 2006. $12.50. Review at American Scientist
External links
Articles
- Intel's information page on Moore's Law – With link to Moore's original 1965 paper
- Intel press kit released for Moore's Law's 40th anniversary, with a 1965 sketch by Moore
- The Lives and Death of Moore's Law – By Ilkka Tuomi; a detailed study on Moore's Law and its historical evolution and its criticism by Kurzweil.
- Moore says nanoelectronics face tough challenges – By Michael Kanellos, CNET News.com, 9 March, 2005
- Moore's Law – Blog and news; Moore's Law graph showing estimated end time, other related graphics
- It's Moore's Law, But Another Had The Idea First by John Markoff
- Gordon Moore reflects on his eponymous law Interview with W. Wayt Gibbs in Scientific American
- Law that has driven digital life: The Impact of Moore's Law – A comprehensive BBC News article, 18 April, 2005
- No More Moore's Law? - BBC News article, 22 July 2004
- IBM Research Demonstrates Path for Extending Current Chip-Making Technique – Press release from IBM on new technique for creating line patterns, 20 February, 2006
- Understanding Moore's Law By Jon Hannibal Stokes 20 February 2003
- The Technical Impact of Moore's Law IEEE solid-state circuits society newsletter; September 2006
- MIT Technology Review article: Novel Chip Architecture Could Extend Moore's Law
- Moore's Law seen extended in chip breakthrough
- Intel Says Chips Will Run Faster, Using Less Power
- A ZDNet article detailing the limits
Data
- Intel (IA-32) CPU Speeds since 1994. Speed increases in recent years have seemed to slow down with regard to percentage increase per year (available in PDF or PNG format).
- A case for PC upgrade, 2002-2007.
- Current Processors Chart