Any more for Moore’s Law?
After 60 years of doubling computer complexity every two years, can Moore’s law still predict the future power of the devices we use?
After 60 years of doubling computer complexity every two years, can Moore’s law still predict the future power of the devices we use?
In 1965, electronics pioneer Gordon Moore was asked to predict the next ten years of progress with the then new-fangled silicon integrated circuits. He estimated, based on physics and manufacturing technologies then available what seemed remarkable: that every two years they would double in complexity, and halve in price, until 1975.
60 years on, perhaps the even more remarkable thing is that they just kept doubling.
Can Moore’s law hold into future decades? What are the next technological innovations that might keep it running?
Sri Samavedam is the vice president for silicon technologies at imec in Belgium, whose job it is to think about the practicalities of manufacturing the next generations of chips years before they become real.
Scott Aaronsen of the University of Texas is a thinker in the field of Quantum Computing – could quantum computing keep the rate of growth going? Or does it need to be thought of differently?
One of the limitations on chip miniaturisation is the dissipation of heat from conventional electronic flow. Nick Harris of Lightmatter is looking at using photons rather than electrons to carry info and logic around a circuit with lower power losses.
Stan Williams has spent much of his career thinking about new devices that could be fabricated into integrated circuits to give it all a push forward. And he tells Roland how the memristor could effectively bring the power of analogue computing to bear as we reach some of the limits of the digital age we have been living in.
Presenter: Roland Pease
Producer: Alex Mansfield and Gareth Nelson-Davies
Last on
Featured
.
Broadcasts
- Thu 17 Apr 202519:32GMTBBC World Service
- Thu 17 Apr 202522:32GMTBBC World Service Europe and the Middle East
- Fri 18 Apr 202504:32GMTBBC World Service Australasia, Americas and the Caribbean, South Asia & East Asia only
- Fri 18 Apr 202508:32GMTBBC World Service
- Fri 18 Apr 202512:32GMTBBC World Service
Sat 19 Apr 202501:32GMTLive News- Sat 19 Apr 202501:32GMTBBC World Service News Internet & East Asia only
- Sun 20 Apr 202503:32GMTBBC World Service East and Southern Africa, Online, UK DAB/Freeview, Europe and the Middle East & West and Central Africa only
- Sun 20 Apr 202523:32GMTBBC World Service except East Asia, Europe and the Middle East, News Internet & South Asia
- Mon 21 Apr 202500:32GMTBBC World Service Europe and the Middle East
Podcast
![]()
Science In Action
The BBC brings you all the week's science news.

