Can We Ever Agree On Moore’s Law?


Nearly five decades after Moore’s Law was first introduced—the famous observation turns 50 next year—we’re still debating it. There are disagreements about whether it was an economic or technology statement. There are questions about whether it was really every 24 months or every 18 months—it was actually both. And there are questions about which companies it really applied to and who... » read more

What Goes Around Comes Around: Moore’s Law At 10nm And Beyond


Modified by Greg Yeric from original by Eric Fischer Gordon Moore penned his famous observation in an era when the people developing the process were also the people designing the circuits. Over time, things got more complicated and work specialization set in, but all was well in the world for many years as the fabs kept delivering on Moore’s Law. Yes, designers had to come up with lot... » read more

Choosing The Right Systems Design Path


I’m a cheap bastard, usually given to self-abnegation when it comes to buying material goods for myself. But I broke down and bought a runner’s watch late last year because I wanted to change up my exercise routine to run the same distances, only faster. I quickly decided against going all in and getting a GPS watch. At this point in the arc of electronics-design technology, it’s hard ... » read more

Tech Talk: Power, Performance And Area In 2.5D


The cost will be comparable at first, but the only way to improve power, performance AND area at the same time will be with a different architectural approach. [youtube vid=XAbE7jpjuMA] » read more

Industry Restructures Around Cost


Talk to any semiconductor executive these days about what’s next for their company and you’ll probably encounter the same perspective—cost will drive future design decisions. Dig a little further, however, and you’ll find no consistent strategy for reducing that cost. While the industry has three very viable solutions for improving the power and performance characteristics of SoCs—... » read more

Industry-Shaking Changes Ahead


I’ve been closely following the increasing power of system OEMs (such as Apple, Google, Facebook and Microsoft) over players in the semiconductor industry with an eye toward understanding how this will affect others in the semi value chain. However, I haven’t paid as much attention to the root causes of why these changes are occurring. McKinsey & Company has provided our industry food f... » read more

Experts At The Table: MEMS Challenges


Semiconductor Engineering sat down to discuss the challenges of MEMS with Rakesh Kumar, senior director of the MEMS program at GlobalFoundries; Tak Tanaka, managing director for Applied Global Services at Applied Materials; Paul Lindner, executive technology director at EV Group; and Alissa M. Fitzgerald, founder and managing member at A.M. Fitzgerald & Associates. SE: What’s happening... » read more

Different Economies Of Scale, And Lots Of Questions


Being able to shrink features and reach the next node is already an exclusive club. It will become more exclusive at 16/14nm, which is expected to hit volume production in 2015, and even more exclusive still at 10nm. In fact, it may begin to look like a semi-private affair. The argument being presented is that economies of scale will still exist for those companies with pockets deep enough ... » read more

Counting Pennies


Even Intel may not have enough cash on hand to pay for a new state-of-the-art fab at 7nm. With fully equipped fabs expected to rise into the plus-$10 billion range over the next few process nodes, and each new process shrink jam-packed with a multitude of new problems, the momentum for continuing to shrink features appears to be slowing down. Technically, it’s possible to shrink transistor... » read more

Tech Talk: 2.5D Stacked Die


What's the motivation for moving to 2.5D packaging and architectures rather than following Moore's Law? Shafy Eltoukhy, VP of operations and technology development at Open-Silicon, talks with Semiconductor Engineering about adding another dimension in semiconductors. [youtube vid=HwpY9bUNt0w] » read more

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