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More Moore: foolish, feasible, or fundamentally different?

Published: 10 November 2008 Publication History

Abstract

Moore's law has been a foundation of modern electronics, sustained primarily by scaling. But can this continue despite the serious problems of litho, variability, device physics, and cost? This panel looks at several possibilities. Perhaps Moore's law will muddle through, as it has so far, with a combination of tools, process, and design. But even if technically possible, Moore's law is in practice driven by economics, and economics might turn against further scaling. Also, we've all seen how performance of single cores has topped out, despite scaling. Might this be a fundamental problem with planar technologies, prompting the need to go 3-D to get further performance increases? Or might CMOS itself give way to other technologies, allowing Moore's law yet another respite? Compare and contrast for yourself these four very different visions of the future of your job, your industry, and your personal gadgets.

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cover image ACM Conferences
ICCAD '08: Proceedings of the 2008 IEEE/ACM International Conference on Computer-Aided Design
November 2008
855 pages
ISBN:9781424428205

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IEEE Press

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Published: 10 November 2008

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ASE08
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ASE08: The International Conference on Computer-Aided Design
November 10 - 13, 2008
California, San Jose

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Overall Acceptance Rate 457 of 1,762 submissions, 26%

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