Julian Floyd Bil

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The overriding challenge in chipmaking has always been to pack more and more tiny transistors on each successive generation of semiconductors. More circuits translated into more and faster computing power. For decades, there was a rough rule for the pace of innovation in the industry: every two years, the number of transistors on a chip roughly doubled—that was the essence of Moore’s law, named for the same Intel co-founder who coined the easy metric of progress.
New Cold Wars: China's Rise, Russia's Invasion, and America's Struggle to Defend the West
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