Moore's Law - Explained!
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Mobile apps, video games, spreadsheets, electronics, and accurate weather forecasts: that’s just a sampling of the life-changing things made possible by the reliable, exponential growth in the power of computer chips over the past five decades. The continual cramming of more silicon transistors onto chips, known as Moore’s Law has been the feedstock of exuberant innovation in computing. In 1965, co-founder of Intel, Gordon Moore - postulated that the number of transistors that can be packed into a given unit of space will double about every 2 years. So Moore’s Law is not a physical or natural law but a rather a surprisingly accurate prediction. It’s Gordon Moore’s perception that transistors were shrinking so fast that every year twice as many could fit onto a chip, though the cost of computers and electronics are halved. Moore’s law states that we can expect the speed and capability of our computers to increase every couple of years and we will pay less for them. Another tenet of Moore’s Law asserts that this growth is exponential. This law has been a rule of thumb and sort of grand Prix competition tournament for electronic companies for 60 years now.
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Sannu
Пікірлер: 173
We need Moore transistors!
@randompersondfgb
3 жыл бұрын
😂 good one
AMD & TSMC : 5nm is around the corner Intel: 14++++++++++nm are around the corner
@JD-kf2ki
3 жыл бұрын
That's 2 vs 1, not a fair play. Pick one and Intel can eat it alive.
@izdeliye-88
2 жыл бұрын
haha fanboys got rekt
This is such a nice channel! This deserves more subs
@CuriousReason
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks :)
@allaboutartarchitecture6893
4 жыл бұрын
It would be.Time is the barrier between them and success
What a beautiful, well explained, dynamic video you´ve made. You're an artist! Congratulations and thank you :)
I came here just to complete my syllabus of Computer Organization but this video made my mind to learn more about each topic!! Thankyou so much CuriousReason for such an amazing video!!
@CuriousReason
3 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad!
A brilliant and super easy illustration of the whole complex scenario.
This is the best illustration, demonstration, and lecture. Thanks!
Hey man great job! There was a lesson in my School work (at Colorado Tech) on this subject. I watched your video first then did the lesson. You talked about EVERY SINGLE THING in the lesson. Great research bud! Thanks alot!
4:08 Your transistor is connected the wrong way. Microphone should be connected to the base, not to the collector.
@Pheeef
3 жыл бұрын
Also the first sequence with the finger pressing the button is not quite right, bc. a standalone npn/pnp transistor only stays on for as long as the base (button) is pressed and not like a flip flop, as you showed it. Besides that it was a real good Video.
@lunatico5318
3 жыл бұрын
@@Pheeef Not a button ... Base is an input signal which controls the collector current in transistor that impacts the voltage drop within it so that, it can act as a switch at On state if base receives current which saturates collector current and emits easily since resistance across emitter-collector(i.e.not an actual resistor but just the second junction barrier) is negligible and has no voltage drop...It is vice versa for OFF state ! Anyways ! Kudos and Good Luck ! Keep enjoying electronics !
2 жыл бұрын
Clout chasing loser
@lucasroach7835
2 жыл бұрын
@@lunatico5318 ah yes, year 1 electronics course in college
@utliscarletaaron6287
Ай бұрын
🤓
It's funny how Intel was the one to create Moore's law, yet it's rival, AMD, got to 7nm first while it's stuck at 14++ nm.
@ahsanqureshi786
4 жыл бұрын
Its not AMD. Its TSMC
@MarketOracleTV
4 жыл бұрын
Intels are more densly packed
@why_tho_
4 жыл бұрын
@@ahsanqureshi786 Yes
@artin5146
4 жыл бұрын
Ok heres the thing. Amd uses 2 chips in one unit. So technically its still 14nm
@Asr_MS
3 жыл бұрын
@@artin5146 i'd rather take two 7nm chips than one 14nm chip lmao
I GOT ALL MY DOUBTS CLEARED. THANKS FOR SUCH INFORMATIVE VIDEOS, YOU ARE WORKING REALLY HARD.🙂😇
Really awesome explanation I was getting bored in these subject but you made it enjoyable
This channel is undervalued
loved this video! literally didn't even know what a transistor is or most of these stuff and u explained from the beginning so it was really helpful!
@sladoleda2750
3 жыл бұрын
forgot to say thank you!
@CuriousReason
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Amal :)
Beautiful explanation
Wonderful research!! Thanks !
I really appreciate how you explain things clearly!
@zyz6325
3 жыл бұрын
Yeah he earned my sub
@EngineerVijitaaDas
6 ай бұрын
kzread.infomaYljhK7GZA?si=CcJ4pKSOt4q0_dfJ
This channel is actually high quality u need MOORE subscribers
Quality video. You've got a new subscriber.
Woow !!! I love your video… ive just recently decided to research and understand the tech field and your video was perfect ! Thank you so much for your efforts
@CuriousReason
Жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
Woow beautifully very well explained 👍
Good explanation.
Great video, thanks!
@CuriousReason
3 жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it! teşekkürler!
pc: exists iMac: am I Joke to you?
@jefferu2577
4 жыл бұрын
yes
@rawchickennugget767
3 жыл бұрын
Yes, yes you are
Yes so guys, IBM Just announced 2 Nm transistor
Its weird that this only has 27k views when its such a well made video... You definitely deserve more than 9.4k sub's.... You got a subscriber out of me 😊 I had a squiz at the rest of your channel & it looks great... Well done/Thank you for all your efforts 🌹🌈☀
@CuriousReason
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you! :) you are truly bringing pure positive energy :)
@rahulzagade3778
3 жыл бұрын
yeah i agree
7:21.... this on the launch day of Intels FX 9590. The 9900KS draws nearly 300 Watts from the Wall when you Overclock it, the 3900X only about 170
@gregorymalchuk272
3 жыл бұрын
Welcome to the breakdown of Dennard scaling.
Beautiful contnt, OP :)
i enjoyed this a lot
@CuriousReason
4 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it :)
Super interesting
"the reason electronics have become smaller and cheaper is due to an observation called more's law" this is completely wrong. Technology advances continuously and mores law is indeed an observation, that in general, every year about 1.8 times as many transistors can be crammed in the same space on a silicon wafer.
@CuriousReason
4 жыл бұрын
True. I realized about that after I made the video, wrong wording, sorry about that. What I partially meant was companies tried and still trying to keep up with the Moores Law as a rule of thumb, which essentially made them very competitive.
Great video now I finally understand more! Btw 7:21 AMD over the flame was unnecessary
nice presentation although I believe that Moore's law will still remain for couple of decades. Ps. what tool did you use to make such beautiful animation ? Thank you again.
Amazing video mate. Do you mind telling how do you make these animations and which softwares you use ?
The ibm hard drive makes loopy disks look futuristic
Wow, I remembered Moore's Law from my basic electronics class... Anyway, one of the things I could not understand, or get a good explanation on was what quantum computing was... People would tell it meant "computing at a quantum level"... Well Duh!!! But after watching this, I finally understand what quantum computing actually is. I never really put together that the reason computers were getting smaller was because transistors were getting smaller, and that there was ceiling... or floor.. whatever. Quantum computers have the ability to move past that barrier, and "what" it might be able to do didn't matter without the "how" it was going to do it, I thought, for a moment anyway, that quantum computing was just a fantasy to get money from investors... But I guess the how probably doesn't matter to someone that would be unable to understand it anyway... THANK YOU GOOD SIR FOR THE UNDERSTANDING OF HOW!!!!! YOU DA MAN!!!
I saw AMD in that burning chip portion @ 07:21
Your vlog is freaking interesting.
wow surprised you don't have a million subs.
We are already doing 2NM, next is 1NM and 0.5 NM and maybe even smaller eh?
still 100% like
Right now, we have 5nm in 2021 (by TSMC) but we have reached the limit. They are right now to find a way to stack them even better or something
nice video
It's worth noting that a "7 nanometer process" is more of a marketing term these days than an actual description of the size of any of the features.
Hello, thank you for the interesting video. Can you please tell me where I can find sources for this information about Moore's Law. I am writing a paper about it at school. :)
Quantum comuting has entered the chat like "moore who"??
thanks for the video. I have a presentation about moore's law so i wonder how you make those animations. can you help guide me through that?
AMD SPOTTED AT 7:20 😂😂😂
@Tan066
4 жыл бұрын
AMD before but now I think the tables have turned 😁
@privatealex0114
3 жыл бұрын
Intel*
@Gulag00
3 жыл бұрын
Nvidia*
@jurgenklopp6885
3 жыл бұрын
Chinese AMD*
Sorry if i sound presumptuous but have you tried putting yt ads? KZread algorithm can be kind of harsh on small channels and your channels high quality
@CuriousReason
4 жыл бұрын
Yes, I did put YT ads here. In what way KZread algorithm is harsh on small channels? if you don't mind me asking
@san_5726
4 жыл бұрын
@@CuriousReason i mean videos rarely pop up on recommendations of small channels i believe. Well i am no youtuber so i could be wrong.
@san_5726
4 жыл бұрын
@@CuriousReason And by yt ads what i meant was putting ads for your channel on KZread, i have seen channels with real good quality since starting video do it to gain audience
Hey guys, the names that all companies put to their nodes are not the transistor real size: is like a commercial name, that’s why quantum tunneling is not a problem today but in a future will be. Intel 10nm is supposed to be more dense than TSMC 7nm.
QUALITY EXPLANATION
R.I.P Gordon Moore
What happened to the photon based hard drives?
Intel speech dude said its alive now :o
There are both Good and Bad if improvement stops. Good is We wont be outdated, can use Device for 10+ years.
@CuriousReason
4 жыл бұрын
I think "outdated" part of your point is a social construct of flexing on social media. lol
@fireartdrawer9531
4 жыл бұрын
@@CuriousReason There is Real effect in being outdated. Those Who bought the Best GPU in 2014(GTX 780 Ti), are struggling to play Games even at 720p ultra. If Hardware progression stopped at 2013, GTX 780 Ti Owners wouldn't have to buy a New GPU Until the GPU dies.
@CuriousReason
4 жыл бұрын
Maybe its because the games become more sophisticated and immersive? I mean, you can’t play the new Modern Warfare in 2012 GPUs.
Now i'm wondering what they did with 3mbs that has them throwing around $30,000
The breaker of sha256
My First Real PC had an onboard 150 MB Hard Drive and Cost over $1,200. I Added a 250MB Hard Drive for $250. Today I bought 64GB Flash Drive for $1.68 Online and the 32GB Drive was $1.38.
In 21st century the transistor will be size of an electron
@CuriousReason
4 жыл бұрын
Or we will jump into quantum world
Moore's law will never die
@tristanjones7217
Жыл бұрын
Have you ever herd of the KZreadr: Moore’s Law Is Dead
so basically one day our electronics will plateau in their computing power and we won't be able to create even more powerful technology...
Quantum tunneling is the how Moore's law dies and also the reason Moore's law will continue...
This is why companies develop cpus with several cores to increase power, the limit has been reached for one core.
Funny that an Ex-Intel said that, formerly employed by the 14nm+++++++++++ company // 3% annually increase for 5 yrs
I think processing power is increased but not the uses ,back in Apollo day thay used kilobyte processor ,but now we using TB of data and Processors are for unwanted things
Thank you for doing this video, I would like to use it to explain Moore's Law in an assignment but could you please give me your bibliography? It would help me so much!
@CuriousReason
4 жыл бұрын
Will add it as soon as I get to my laptop.
@randompersondfgb
3 жыл бұрын
@@CuriousReason Have you got to your laptop yet?
@CuriousReason
3 жыл бұрын
@@randompersondfgb not yet
then if moral laws end we cant have more gpus but i like gpus i hope soon new tec come and gpus keep getting better
Forget smaller Give me a larger phone with a larger screen and battery. Stack 6 chips in it and make it 6 times faster. No buffering
6:30 He meant the atom has diameter of 1 pm or 1 picometer. There’s going to be many years left of Moore’s law.
@user-gm3pc1ok3w
2 жыл бұрын
Actually, the size of atom is about 0.1nm. The nucleus of atom is 1pm as you said.
That 7nm capacitor is manufactured exclusively by AMD. Intel only has a capacity for 14nm capacitor manufacturing, but their chips outperform many AMD chips. Its a weird world. If we hit 5nm or find some exotic material for 1nm chips, that'd be cool. But hyperthreading and optimization will be far more important in the future.
@rohan7382
2 жыл бұрын
It's not capacitor 😑, it's a transistor
Let’s go quantum computing
If anyone is interested, I've just uploaded video which shows how transistor count changed from 1971 to 2020, check it out! kzread.info/dash/bejne/eaCfk7Gsoc-Xe7Q.html
And the new A14 is going to be 5 nm 😂
Nice video. I think I am only one watching this video from Georgia(country one not state)
@CuriousReason
4 жыл бұрын
gamarjoba!
@heildzudzu9356
4 жыл бұрын
@@CuriousReason Gamarjoba. Love your vids.
@CuriousReason
4 жыл бұрын
Not very far from Caucasus :)
So the conclusion is that the Silicon Valley of the future will be called Gallium Valley or Nitride Valley or Graphene Valley. Right??
1:11
Core 2 Quantum
The godzilla is aproching the transistor, the transistor is losing power
Your prediction is already WRONG! 3nm cpus are a reality
So in ten years, 8G ram will seem tiny on any device.
I hope you bought some nvedia stocks
7:20 AMD 💀💀 DED
@ScottNguyenRCAC
4 жыл бұрын
loooooool
@gamerworld8029
4 жыл бұрын
3gen and wrecks Intel now
@pavelestrada7988
3 жыл бұрын
Not anymore.
@-L0-
3 жыл бұрын
@@pavelestrada7988 5000 series lol
Yes but why is it 2 years!! why is it not 1.5 or 1 years or even 6 months. Can anyone answer this!
Moore's Law is fundamentally flawed. Check out Wright's Law instead. Basic reason: once your gap is smaller than air molecules, you have no air flow and no heat transfer and you can't cool down the semiconductor. There's economic reasons as well, but that's the physical quantum limitation.
Easy on AMD 7:21 lol
he calls moore's law "moze low"
Silicone is the substrate, it’s not the transistor. Silicon is only part of the material used to make a transistor. Great work on trying to simplify everything!
and yet we will have 2nm by 2025
@CuriousReason
3 жыл бұрын
lets just count the atoms
@thereddog223
3 жыл бұрын
@@CuriousReason we will be at around 1 by 2030
Computer program over
Atoms are .1-.3 nanometers not 1 nanometer
liked
@CuriousReason
4 жыл бұрын
Thanks :)
Maybe it´s time for unconventional computing to enter the scene
#1136 ADA TAPI MATI 😂🇮🇩 (HUKUM)
Why was AMD showed like 0.1 seconds when the chip was on fire?? Yielded in a dislike from me. Very good summary otherwise
@CuriousReason
3 жыл бұрын
I have owned fair share of AMD GPUs and all of them got so hot for no reason that put Pompeo volcanic eruption to shame. I have to admit, AMD became much better now and this video is not brand new as well. So I hope you understand :)
@WattPerformance
3 жыл бұрын
@@CuriousReason appreciate the response and attitude, switched to like (maybe inconsequential but anyways :)). AMD have surpassed Intel in energy efficiency since Zen 2017 so Intel is how the lava spewing cpu manufacturer but understand your experience :) watched a few other of your clips, very good and u deserve more views :)
@CuriousReason
3 жыл бұрын
@@WattPerformance Exactly all my AMD models were pre-2017. But I have to admit, AMD is kicking Intel's ass. :) Thank you buddy! Have a great day! :)
Wow you've visualized transistors so wrong
@hgplaying5629
2 жыл бұрын
Pushing te button (base) to turning the transistor on and off as if it would be a light switch😂
3:53 wrong
It was always wrong
Moore's law is dead