AMD disagrees with NVIDIA over the death of Moore’s Law, stating several more years of life
Mark Papermaster, AMD’s Chief Technical Officer, disagreed with Huang’s statement from September but added that transistor density could not continue to be increased every 1.5 to 2 years — especially maintaining the exact cost. However, AMD’s Moore’s Law lifespan thoughts do have some caveats. While the company sees chiplets playing a crucial part in the future of semiconductor technology, it does not follow Moore’s Law to an exact. AMD CTO Mark Papermaster via The Register Moore’s Law is “the observation that the number of transistors in a dense integrated circuit (IC) doubles about every two years.” This was created by Gordon Moore, co-founder of Fairchild Semiconductor and Intel. His estimated predictions have been used since 1975. Still, at the rate of manufacturing, the industry has slowly started to see a shift, slowing down over time (since 2010), which would explain Papermaster’s thoughts. AMD is also putting many of its newer designs on Field Programmable Gate Array, or FPGA, technology, with integration being seen in some markets. The company believes in its wide variety of customization, calling it “adaptive computing.” FPGA is used in several markets, such as aerospace, consumer electronics, medical, wired, and wireless communications, and high-performance computing and data storage. This “will keep innovation going and we’ll keep, I’ll say, a Moore’s Law equivalent, meaning that you continue to really double that capability every 18 to 24 months, [this] is the innovation around how the solution is put together,” he added. AMD CTO Mark Papermaster via The Register Intel also believes in chiplets for semiconductors, utilizing the concept in its designs. However, Intel’s pathway is slightly different, using minuscule silicon interposers with high-density interconnects called embedded multi-die interconnect bridges or EMIBs. It is shown to use the highest interconnect density when needed. Intel also recently highlighted how advanced tech in transistors will help keep Moore’s Law alive for the next several years. News Sources: TechPowerUP, Wikipedia, IEEE Spectrum