lopri
Elite Member
- Jul 27, 2002
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You mean coding?
Patents, more likely. Though I suspect the patent bubbles would bust at some point.
You mean coding?
The potential of graphene is pretty astonishing because you can stand the graphene on end, make it vertical, and then pack them laterally like a stack of pancakes laid on its side.
The xtor density can get amazingly high because the drain (or source) can be buried under the graphene, with the other residing over top.
Think finfet with the fin width shrunk to ~0.15nm. Crazy thin.
Interesting, Kuhn's recent presentation @ IDF show some experimental data using horizontal layouts w/graphene (pp 41 ff). This makes sense since, as I understand it, sheets of graphene are easier to manufacture.
A electron diffusion gap of 0.15 nm sounds amazing, but getting a respectable Ion current out of that would be hard (wouldn't VG need to be fairly high) - and quantum confinement could be a problem. Still, the scientists at Intel and elsewhere have become increasingly more clever about solving these types of problem as the state of the art in semiconductor technology has started putting more demand on these types of solutions.
PS, thanks for the post you made on Bravais super lattices, I was stuck in the ER for 6+ hours with only my iPad. It made for interesting reading and brought me right back to my undergrad QM studies. Suddenly, I have an urge to gat my go for an M.Sc. in Physics.![]()
It will take a while before they commercialize the perpendicular orientation, it took the hard-drive industry a while to perfect it too. (not to mention it took them a while before they publicized the fact they were working on it in the R&D labs![]()
I don't mind you asking, and I'd be happy to answer to the best of my abilities.
FWIW, I post on a forex forum (forum.mql4.com to be specific) under the username 1005phillip. As you can imagine from my CPU-related threads here, my posts over there are "enthusiast" rated(albeit towards forex rather than CPUs
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It is really fun though. I thought process node development was my dream job, but this is definitely more fun. A different brain teaser every day.
Cool .. I just got 'trading' and 'algos' and thought you might be heavy into some genetic algorithms of sorts.. as I can google-about some ppl actually do AI on the scripting language of MT4
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The potential of graphene is pretty astonishing because you can stand the graphene on end, make it vertical, and then pack them laterally like a stack of pancakes laid on its side.
The xtor density can get amazingly high because the drain (or source) can be buried under the graphene, with the other residing over top.
Think finfet with the fin width shrunk to ~0.15nm. Crazy thin.
If I were studying physics today, I'd definitely look for an applied Physic program that was strong in semiconductor device physics.
I'm still stuck on this because a gate width of 150 pm just blows my mind.
The advanced degree you'd want is called "Chemical Physics", it combines all the grad level quantum mechanics that comes with a PhD in Physics along with all the chemistry of electronic materials that comes with a PhD in Physical Chemistry.
Combine that with a BS in materials science engineering, throw in a couple minors in mathematics and chemistry on the side, and you'll do alright for yourself as a process development engineer![]()
...Performance can be increased by one of two ways - (1) increase the rate at which work gets done (more clocks per second), or (2) increase the amount of work that gets done per clock....
How rude of me, first, thanks for the this info! Now, I will ramble on as usual...
BBBut, I don't know if I can handle being called a Chemist
Funny, Quite a few of Intel's fellows are Physicists, but obviously there is a need for a strong understand physical chemistry.
Oh, and I already have a degree in Physics and found out that we couldn't get a Minor in Math because it was already implied by the Physics degree (and in fact, I actually learned higher level math concepts beyond my math classes in my Junior and Senior year). The funny thing is that I'd need to learn the math all over again (but it wouldn't take me long, I'm just rusty).
I think you could probably add a 3) Reduce the amount of work that needs to get done
Both through programmers being more performance-optimization focused and by CPU makers creating new architectures
I think stagnating performance could be a reason to abandon or heavily modify x86 even at the expense of abandoning a lot of legacy support.
I also think it's pretty inevitable that a lot more emphasis will be placed on program optimization. And perhaps having a fast computer will be less about the hardware you have inside it but the software you are running (which would also carry the corresponding premium price) More standardized hardware platforms would allow for more intense optimization.
Just my theories!
I am currently self-employed in the industry of foreign currency exchange. Designing algorithms that autonomously trade (buy/sell) foreign currencies without human involvement in the process.
:O You work for evil
as i work for myself, your post carries intriguing implications :hmm:
Mind you i am a "phd", so technically you should state "you work for dr. Evil"...to which i could reply (with pinky finger firmly planted near the corner of my lips) "time for some freaking laser beams! :twisted:"
